The Cedarville Herald, Volume 66, Numbers 1-26
d p t g ym m m m w k m m x % » » *. .-1: t \- !v I 6. ?■ i ( * 1 :t ■ t r . T U B C E B A I Y I I L 1 H E R A 1 P E D IT O R AND F U i p S K B I t fMM#Mr A w ; .WMii T k MW Pr*#* As*#** WIIIIIIWBtllHIIIMIIIIIIMWIlimiUPMWWMHWnillWIMIf lMHW numm *»m.i em k »» w # Bgteijfttfl «$ t h e P o e t OflLce, O od a rv ille , Ohio* O c to b e r S I , 1887 , a* s e co n d c lae s m a tte r . • |f A Y Y , I f # * _ _ _ ^ LOYALTY OP AMERICANS GIVEN A TEST T h e m a rv e lo u s su cce ss o f t h e s e c o n d w a r b o n d d riv e w h ich w a s ov e r su b a c rih ed b y s e v e r a l b illion d o lla rs , a n d re c k o n e d a s t h e g r e a t e s t f in a n c ia l e n g in e e rin g f e a t , o f a ll tim e , is a t r i b u t e t o t h e A m e ric a n p e o p le a n d a n a n sw e r to t h e c h a rg e s o f iso la t i n g so ftn e s s a n d t h e c h a rg e o f in d if fe r e n c e to w a r d s success W h e n a n a tio n o f p e o p le o v e r su b s c rib e s u c h a sum in t h e f a c e o f N ew D e a l d ic ta to r s h ip , g r a f t In g o v e rnm e n t-w a r con t r a c t s ; in te r n a L i l g h ti n g b e tw e en , d e p a r tm e n t h e a d s ; m is ru le b r o u g h t a b c fu tb y irr e sp o n s ib le a n d in e x p e r ie n c e d b r am - tr u s t- e r a ; p o litic a l/fa v o ritism i n a p p ly in g t h e d r a f t t o a ll a li k e ; p la c in g o f th o se ^ o f d r a f t a g e in re s p o n s ib le g o v e rnm e n t so ft-jo b s w h ile boy s f rom f am ilie s w ith o u t D em o c ra tic p u ll f a c e sh o t a n d s h e ll; n am in g p e t t y D em o c ra tic p o litic ian s to a rm y com m ission ed o ffices w ith o u t a d a y ’s e x p e r ie n c e ; a n d a n a dm in is tr a tio n b e in g d ic ta te d b y B ritish w a r lo rd s , i t is a w o n d e rfu l t r i b u te t h a t m illion s o f p e o p le c o u ld l a y a w a y th e s e i r r it a ti n g ev e n ts in o u r p u b lic lif e to c o n tr ib u te a sum f o r s u p p o r t o f t h e w a r t h a t no h um a n b e in g c a n c om p re h e n d i n te rm s o f d o lla r s an d c en ts . E v e n t h e r e c e n t s c a n d a l o f H o u s e No. 29 on K St: in W a sh in g to n w h e r e h ig h N ew D e a le r s d iscu s sed w a r con t r a c t s w ith a n u n k n ow n g u e s t, w o u ld n o t h a v e h e ld b a c k th e s a le o f a sin g le b o n d . T h e p u b lic is in te r e s te d in w in n in g th e w a r f ir s t, I t is g o in g to w i p e o u t a ll th e s e s c a n d a ls b y e le c t in g a R e p u b lic a n H o u se n n d p r o b a b ly a S e n a te in 1,944. T h e s c a n d a ls fo llow in g t h e f i r s t w o r ld w a r a r e a s n o th in g w h e n you c om p a re t h e s q u a n d e r e d b illion s a g a in s t t h e F i r s t W a r m illions t h a t w e r e su p p o s ed to b e t h e s ta k e o f t h e f am o u s G re e n e Co t t a g e on K St. in W a sh in g to n . T h e r e a r e m o re D em o c r a tic m il- rliona ries a s a r e s u l t o f t h e S econd W o rld W a r t h a n b o th th e R e p u b lic a n a n d D em o c ra tic g r a f t e r s in th e F i r s t W o r ld W a r. T h e A m e ric a n p e o p l e do n o t h a v e t o b e rem in d e d ev e ry t e n d a y s t h a t w e J iv e jm d e r a d em o c ra c y a n d t h e y a lso know th e y liv e in a r e p u b lic , su ch a s no o th e r n a tio n h a s , n o t one o f w h ic h c a n b e fo u n d in e n lig h te n e d E u ro p e . U n til th e . b i r t h o f t h e N ew D e a l E n g la n d b o a s te d n o t Of a d em o c racy , n o r a r e p u b lic b u t lim ite d m o n a rc h y . M ost A m e ric an s ev id en tly h a v e in v e s te d t h e i r sav ings, b y th e p u r c h a s e o f b o n d s to save t h e i r ow n c o u n try a n d l e t th e w a r lo rd s a n d m ilita ry p ow e rs o f t h e w r a n g lin g n a tio n s t a k e c a r e o f th em se lv e s . CAN HEAVEN AND HELL BE UNITED BY NEWDEALERS? M u ch is b e in g s a id a b o u t t h e com in g W o rld W a r Con f e r e n c e , one o f th o s e N ew D e a l p ip e d r e am s su ch as. m igh ; com e b u t o f a s lum op ium d um p . I t is su ch a n im p o r ta n R oo sev e lt, H u ll, W a lla c e .c o n f e r e n c e w ith w o rld le a d e r s t h a r e p r e s e n ta tiv e s o f th e 'p r e s s arfe p ro h ib ite d f ro m b e in g p re seh f to g ive t h e f a c ts tp t h e p u b lic— t h a t w ill p a y t h e co s t o f th e ‘ sh in d ig i n a $60 a, d a y h o te l in V irg in ia , u n d e r fo o d ra tio n in g , a n d t h e n p a y bullions m o re if th e d r e am p la n s a re e v e r ad o p te d b y t h e w o rld p ow e rs . • • ' *. W h e n th e s e d r e am e r s g e t t h r o u g h you w ill n o t recogn ize t h e o ld world,', I t is g o ing to h a v e its. ‘‘f a c e lif te d ” , econom ic a lly , in d u s tr ia lly a n d re lig io u s ly . A ll th is is g o in g to b e done „e v e n in t h e f a c e o f a d m itte d f a c t s S u n d a y n ig h t t h a t “-we h a ' • , n o t y e t w o n .the w a r .” T h is was*a r a d io adm ission b y F r a n k lin ,;D. .Roosevelt. . . ;r. E v e ry th in g is. t o o p e r a te a c c o rd in g to w e ll o iled p la n s ' T h e N ew D e a l-is to m a n a g e t h e World a n d f in a n c e i t a t the e x p e n se of’ t h e incom e t a x p a y e rs , b u s in e s s in te re s ts , -fa rm e rs a n d o f co u rs e t h e p o litic ian s , w ho f in d a w a y o f in s titu tin g a 5p la n o f r e f u n d s f o r t h e cho sen f ew . „ ■ v’ . . .T h e re is to b e a w o r ld R ^ C in te r n a tio n a l in s cop e to b u ild r a ilr o a d s , b u ild sh ip s, in d u s tr ie s in a ll la n d s . T h e r e is t o be a w o rld A A A to f in a n c e f o r e ig n f a rm e r s a n d m a n a g e th e ir f a rm s t o b r in g f o r t h tw o b la d e s o f g r a s s w h e re n o n e h av e g r o w n s in c e t h e b ir th o f A d am . A ll p ro b lem s f o r a g ric u ltu re la b o r, in d u s tr y , f in a n c e a n d e d u c a tio n a r e t o b e sp lved by th e _self a p p o in te d tr iu m v ir a te . A s c r e a to r s o f d e b t non e cou lt s u rp a s s t h is tr io a s e x em p lifie d by t h e hom e N ew D e a l ex p e rim e n t. D e b ts t o M a rs a n d th e e n tir e s o la r sy stem p ro b ab ly w o u ld b e o f no m o re co n c e rn t h a n w h a t w e h a v e .today . I f f a i l u r e is su cce ss t h e a v e ra g e A m e ric a n cou ld p r e d ic t th e f u tu r e o f t h e W o rld N ew D ea l. W h e n th r e e m en c an un ite . h e a v e n a n d h e ll a n d b r in g th e e x trem e s to a comm on cause, t h e n th e r e w ill b e t h e g a th e r in g p la c e f o r th o se w ho s ing th e N ew D e a l a n th em w i t h 3a N ew D e a l h ym n a l in one h a n d a n d a b o ttle o f NOw D e a l b e e r in th e o th e r. A g lo riu s f u tu r e a w a its t h e N ew W o rld . W ill th e r e b e a Jo h n L. L ew is th e r e ? “LET THE PEOPLE KNOW” C iv ilian " so ld ie r s ” , f ig h tin g t h e b a tt le o f p ro d u c tio n a long t h e h om e f r o n t, o f te n are, con fu sed a n # p u z z le d a b o u t t h e im p o r ta n c e o f t h e 'p a r f th e y a r e p la y in g in t h e w a r . In no sm a l part* t h is c ond ition c an b e tr a c e d d ire c tly to a la c k o f su ffic ien in fo rm a tio n a s to t h e p ro g re s s o f t h e A llie d cau se . T h e r e m a y h a v e b e e n pom e excuse, e a r ly a f t e r o u r e n tr y in to th e con flic t, t o d o u b t t h e a b ility o f A m e ric a to r e c o v e r qu ick ly f r o m th e sh o c k o f b a d n ew s. W e w e re t h e n n o t con d itio n ed , m en ta lly , to t h e re v e rs e s w h ic h w a r is c e r ta in to b r in g . B u t t o d a y t h a t e x p la n a tio n is n o t a t a ll conv incing . W e haVe p ro v e d ov e r a c o n s id e rab le p e rio d , t h a t o u r m o ra le is s tr o n g eno u g h to t a k e t h e b a d a lo n g w ith t h e good . T h e r e is n o th in g lik e t r u t h to b u ild p u b lic con fid en ce . T h e r e is n o th in g lik e p u b lic Con fidence in le a d e rs h ip to b r in g o u t t h e b e s t e f f o r ts o f t h e p e o p le to w a r d t h e o b je c tiv e w h ich is v ic to ry . T h e h a z e w h ich su rro u n d s a g r e a t p a r t o f o u r m ilita ry a n d d ip lom a tic s t r a t e g y may* b e n e c e s s a ry , b u t c e r ta in ly w h e r e e v e r i t is po ssib le t o le t t h e p e o p le k n ow p lan s a n d p o lic ie s ,.d e fe a ts a n d v ic to rie s , t h a t sh o u ld h e don e . W e ’r e a ll in th is w a r t o g e th e r . , V ic to ry o r d e f e a t w ill m e a n q u ite a s m u ch to t h e f a rm e r a s to th e in d u s tr ia lis t; to th e b o o tb la c k a s to t h e C a b in e t m em b e r. T h e p a r t e a c h o f us p la y s is a n im p o r ta n t p a r t, b e a r i n g m o re d ire c tly th a n m ost o f u s k n ow on t h e issu e a t s ta k e . I t is, th e n , o u r r i g h t a n d o u r d u ty to k now a n d to s tu d y t h e p ro g re s s o f o u r m ilita ry p r o g r am i n a ll its r am ific a tio n s . T h e m o re c om p le te ly wc c a n b e in fo rm e d t h e g r e a t e r o u r co n fid en c e , n o t on ly in oui le a d e rsh ip / b u t in t h e ju s tic e o f o u r cau se , -----C in c inn a ti E n q u ir e r a n d f 'm*] sonal wmtaoifity •aetata wrier the skin and on the exterior between t t a two. Here is ta t' man fighting hi# politic*! to*, he- whop he tafeed elect with half * pillion dollar* from the union treasury- The other using ^iwawHwiwMiiMitwiwuiiiiMwmitmiiwwinuMj tjis jkw #r of the entire government “Prohibition, for the duration” W * &> worst hi* foe a t *U turns in the the topic of the WQL Washington] wad. Thousand* W * govern- Forum -with two wet Congressmen went agent* and many members of and two dry Oogressroen, The basis congress, a t hi* bade. Nothing of the for debate was that week-end hang- kind ever happened in American his- overs caused much, of the absenteeism *tory. in war production plants. The wet speakers said not. The drys quoted industrial leaders who said yes. Had all four heard the average Monday or Tuesday police court radio broad cast over WHIO, Dayton, whep a long line, of drunks faced charges of intoxication, the wet3 would have had to change their argument. The ar rests are not all of the drunks by any hieans. Thousands are never seen by the authorities. Some are in hiding and some in bed for a day or so, is the evidence of industrial leaders who have checked up on the Monday morning absentees.- More over much of their proof comes from the wives of the laborers. Of course the New Deal takes no position on how much one may drink or how drunk one may. get. No statement fronritbe government in any quarter has touched on the in toxication charge. The administra tion having sponsored the cause of the liquor business* hardly could say much, With beer for army use and hard liquor for the officers we are given to understand. intoxicants are a great builder of “morale”, Prob ably the recent coal strike would not have become a part of the war history had John L..Lewis and his union lead evs been given one of the “beer and cake hour of charm” parties at the White 'House such as was given con gressional delegations. No converts' ■to the New Deal were made among -the Congressmen. We cannot speak for the miners. 3 During the recent, campaign for the second war bond sale we ran across a former supporter of the New Deal, he olainly stated he would not purchase bonds as long as the present admin istration' is in-power.. When asked! .vhy, he gave the following reason: (I did my part and turned in three tires, one nearly new, the other two bad many miles use and, I expected to ase them on a trailer. I received $1.35 for the three tires with the nearly new one, which cost a month before I turned'it in.” When my government through its agents robs me of my property hnd then turns it over to some dealer to make a profit, to keep the New Peal pol itical machine well, oiled, I am not in the market for government bond$ at this time”. “If robbery and patriotism must go hand in hand, if is time to swap horses mid stream of high land-,” Drew Pearson in his radio broad cast let out some confidential infor mation as to the intensity of the heat a t a White House'meeting last SUn day, between Harold L. Ickes, Secre tary of Interionr, and Harry Hopkins one of the numerous presidents of the United Staltes, According. to Pearson, Hopkins wanted FDR to blast Lewis in Vitrolic terms in his Sunday night broadcast. Ickes pro tested oh the grounds that if would make Lewis a martyr to the labor cause and ;get nowhere. He also said Roosevelt had prepared two speeches, one with plenty of poison and the other sh’ooting-into the air and aimed a t no one, The CIO was organized by Lewif with Roosevelt backing when he thought the AFL was in Republican hands. One o f the big front page headlines of CIO activity when auto mobile worker* were organized and taken from AFL ranks. Higher wage# were demanded, Lewis dri hot force a strike as such had been known, Men reported for work and sat down, Here was horn the sit- down strike and ft had the blessing of the New Deal, Election time ap proached again a n d 'it was charged Lewis was slated fo£ a cabinet chair for labor. *Instead Secretary Perkins continued to bold that portfolio. Lewis and Roosevelt broke. Natural ly the public wanted tor know what Lewis and his miners Were, to get for the $500,000 put into the Democratic campaign fund.. By this time both Lewis and Roosevelt declared war on eac^ other.' At the last Roosevelt fireside chat Roosevelt took the air to blast the farm bloc who he held was forcing the nation into inflation. He linked; Johtt-L. Lewis with the farmers of America as aiding this terror. Roose velt issued his: famous “hold the line against. Inflation”. Sunday night FDR stated some prices that affect the cost of living,,.would he “rolled back” *we are told to May 1941. As farm crops constitute’ about 90 per cent of the living: costs, this means all farm prices must be grei.tly re duced to offset the Lewis claim that the New Deal had “not held the line”. Members of Congress on Monday were asking how FDR could reduce farm prices and expect normal or ex panded crop production. We get a tip from those supposed to know that the administration is as sore at the American farmer as John L,, Lewis. The New Deal AAA agency was set up to ‘hold control of farm interests, not for tide farmer, but for the New Deal. Organized labor is 100 per cent against the AAA and all farmers: and is causing FDR plenty of worry. iA iM tau tK m m 'v fn 1# W i F i oqm« were patriotic and give more of hi* labor, time and effort In pro ducing the leea*-Iend with out cost of, hi* labor. F irst we notice the ehart show* there is to be an inter national labor authority which will call for organized labor on all farm* a t wages set by the economic plan ners, none of which ever have had personal success a t farming or even' in ordinary, business. There is to be an international tank, usinr our gold deposit for the benefit of the war- financial distressed nation# and pay deductions aqd higher income taxes to keep the foreign official set-up going. Agriculture is to bo handled from a technology standard, all the old-time tested methods discarded for,, that of the brain-trusters. Free trade is to dominate; the world, all of which Roosevelt, Wallace arid Hull can sin" without word* or music. Each fa m ia to have a number and each farmer a number and a uniform. Wallace ha? been selling the Ameri can farmer down the river pn his South American trip. You should investigate his “buffer stock” or price stabiliation pools, lower farm prices in this country to equal the slave labor farm crops of other na tion*. Had you noticed the New Deal is importing slave labor from Eng lish colonial possessions for. farm use in America? I t is not hard for Hull, Tennessee Democrat, to ap prove slave labor. A^Civil War was fought against slave labor.- Slave labor never was upheld in this coun try except by the Democrats. FOR SALE— Jerasy Cow, ? tons of loose alfalfa hay, Florence Hot Blast heater, large size, like new; Dayton Computing counter platform scales. O. E. Dawson, R, R. 2. NOTICE ON FILING INVENTORY O p e n s S u n d a y A t T h e X e n i a T h e a t e r v . ? , v / > 1 *%**'’*#>*'*'*"«******** Those who heard the broadcast can recall how he hesitated time after, time in hi* reading as if he was skip ping part of his manuscript or a t least substituting words. Such com ment has been general. He did not s'peak with the ready firmness as in the past. He probably knew that Lewis had issued his statement of giving the government the job of running the mines and get coal to munition factories. Lewis left the loop hole after his Sunday confer ence with Ickes by stating the miners still expected the wage question to be settled during the fifteen day truce. The next troublesome ques tion on, the. mine issue was the Use of soldiers a t the mines. This pro posal is said to have drawn fire from AFL and CIO leaders as well as Railway Brotherhoods. More than a million labor union members were at stake on this issue and it was inti mated a general strike of all unions would be called if the military force ‘was used in the coal fields. FDR in his speech insisted miners would be protected With soldiers quarters eon- Some one sends us a copy of the May issue of “The International Teamster", official organ of one of the Six largest unions in the country and one of ttie most powerful pol itically. An article “A Farmer Snaps His Galluses” takes' -the Indiana Hoosier Farmer, published by the Farm Bureau to task, The “Team ster” says the Farm Bureau* is ‘just 'one tenacle of the farm lobby in Washington. . . . . , . . which sucks the blood from the economic stabil ization program. The article asks, “Who took farming to Washington and took the millions of dollars . . , , when one-third of the nation was hun gry?” The article wants rationing of farm foods continued to hold down prices to the farmer for cheaper liv ing in 4the city . . . . less food in farm homes with the rest of us scrambling for crumbs, Thus you have the sit. nation of the New Deal policy of "playing both ends against the mid die”. Labor organizations are daily tightening their lines with the ad ministration to roll back all farm prices to 1941 levels, no pa^vfor farm labor in farm prices and^Russian peasantry to -substitute American liberty as American farmers have known it the past century. Your name on a AAA card is induction into the New Deal planned farm army to feed foreign nations a t your expense While New Dealers parade a refor mation for the entire world —— at you expense, Watch Mr. Jeffers, the synthetic rubber .czar, that crossed swords with New Dealers that lean to England and the rubber trust. Jeffers holds blanket instructions from the White House to produce synthetic rubber. Now, Jeffers is on the way out. The British arc after his scalp and the New Dealers qre doing the dirty wiork. In the meantime you will probably have no chance to ride on synthetic* rubber tires or even British crude rubber ties, There is murder a t the cross roads—-Jeffers is to be the victim under an Inside govern mental order issued Tuesday.* Jr venient hut, distant points from mines. About the last statement to come from the White House follow ing the labor. disturbance was that FDR wa3 “indisposed” and Would’ is sue no statement on subsequent turn of events in tjie mine controversy. As We scan a plat of the New Deal Post War World in a popular weekly magazine the American farmer can ,.>^bok long and loud for the place he is to have in the ROosevelt, Hull, Wal lace New Deal economic heaven where manna -is to fall upon the peoples of Paul McNutt, the New Deal War Man Power Commission head, who freezes labor one hour and. then thaws the next when reaction de velops, has had a hot and cold time during the coal strike, ‘ He tries to piny all interests^ no doubt keeping ih mind millions of votes are at' stake. kk.JftfirtBWr, Dwi Attkvtaittrtw dirfttpribcfpka io*Som«wni To ShowAbout,’' withWlltaa Gaxtoa sod Cobto*Wtabt. it. The break between Roosevelt and- Lewis on the wage issue is one of the greatest political battles of the century. The average citizen sits BUY YOUR NEXT SUIT NOWH s , NEW AND USED $ 9 . 95 , $ 12 .%, $ 14.80 UP • Don't wait too long or it may be too late, MONEY TO LOAN t On Anything of Value R. &B. LOAN Office 65 W, Main a t , , . Springfield, 0. Washington Letter (Continued from first sago) proximately two hundred and fifty billion dollars to defeat Our enemies. To date about nintey billion dollars of the American budget has actually been expended, with one hundred and sixty billion remaining to be spent in the future, DuringvApril expendi tures were running % the rate of seven billion dollars- per month,* or eighty-four billion per year. Plans call for increasing war expenditures to more than eight billion dollars each, month by .early 1944. However, be cause of the piling up of unused weapons and war supplies in govern ment warehouse, .1944 war, spending may be drastically reduced, rather than increased. Today American mil. itary expenditures are actually more than the total of all the other waring nations combined—friend and foe alike. Yet there are those who will say the United States is not doing her full share. COURT NEWS (Continued from page one). was authorized to sell personal prop erty. • ; ■' J ORDER APPRAISAL The county auditor was directed to appraise the estate ’of Norwood L Youpg. ' MARRIAGE LICENSES (Issued) John Theodore Kirkby, 615 Nich olas* Ave., Toledo, accountant, and Elizabeth Myler, 215 1-2 E, .Second Street. Dr, H. B. McElree,’Xenia. Jerry Wallace Martin, 258 N. King St,, soldier, and Betty-* Mae Jones, Xenia, R. R. 5. Rev. J. Reed Miller. Milton Floyd Benton, Elko, Minn,, Patterson Field soldier, and Mrs. Anna Marie Flanagan, 1273 W. Forest Ave., Detroit, Mich. (Applied For) Henry F. Griffith, 140 1-2 E. Main St., Springfield, and Viona Gamble, Springfield, R. R. 4. Harold Edison Mouser, 315 W. Third St,, soldier, and Paulinp Hop kins, 311 W. Church St. Dr. R. B, Wilson, Xenia, NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Maude Shoemaker, De ceased. Notice is hereby given <that Addle Warden has been duly appointeclvas Administratrix of the estate of Ma.ude Shoemaker, deceased, late of. Bellbrook, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 21st day. of April, 1943. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio, FOR SALE!-*- A McCormick Deer- ing cream separator, in good con dition; also a two wheel trailer, well made and in good condition. R, L, Hixon, Cedarville, WANTED:—-Dish washer, man or woman, $20 per week. Frank De Wine, Yellow Springs, WANTED— Woman for house work a t $16 a week, phone 2400, Yellow Springs, -BUY WAR BONDS TODAY The State of Ohio, Greene County, Probate Court. To the surviving spouse, if any, next of kin; beneficiaries under the will, if any; and the attorneys or at torneys representing any of the »- fovementioned persons, You are hereby notified that on the 22nd day of April A, D. 1943, an In ventory and Appraisement of the estate of Carl Hujtsong, deceased, late o f, Beavercreek in said Conuty, was filed jn this Court. Said Inventory and appraisement Will be for hearing before this Court on the 18th day of May, 1943, at 10 o’clock, A. M, , Any person desiring to file excep- tins to said Inventory must file them a t lea,it five days prior to the day set for hearing; * <■ Given under my hand a nd seal of said Court, this 22i@32my of April, 1943. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER Probate Judge — 1-------- 7 —■* l ■ NOTICE ON FILING INVENTORY The State of Ohio, Greene County, Probate Court. To the surviving spouse, if any; next of „kin; beneficiaries under the Will,, if any; and the attorney or a t torneys representing any of the a- forementioned persons. ; You-are hereby notified that on the 26th day of April A. D, 1943j art Inventory and Appraisement *of the estate of Charles S. Fisher, deceased, late of Sugar Creek Twp. in said County, was filed in this court. Said inventory and Appraisement will be for hearing before this Court on the 18th day of'May, 1943, at 10 o’clock, A. M. Any person desiring to file excep tions to said Inventory must file them a t least five days prior to the day set. for hearing. Given under my hand and seal of said Court, this 26th day of April, 1943. , WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER Probate Judge LEGAL NOTICE Greene last Court of Common ‘Pleas, County, Ohio. No. 23123 Ralph L. Trollinger, Plaintiff, -vs- 1 Lucille Trollinger, Defendant. ‘ Lucille Trollinger, whose known place of residence was 1515 Emmett St,, Evansville, Ind., will1 take notice that on The 27th day-of March 1943, Ralph L. Trollinger filed his petition against her i i Common Pleas Court of Greene County, Ohioj. for divorce on the grounds of gross neglect of duty, and extreme cruelty, and unless the said Lucille Trollinger shalllinswer said petition on or be fore the 15th day of May, 1943, judgment may be taken granting the plaintiff a divorce. ; RALPH L. TROLLINGER, Plaintiff (4-2-6t-5-7) Smith,. McCallister and Gibney Attorneys for the Plaintiff. LEGAL NOTICE Court of Common Pleas, Greene County, Ohio. . . , . No. 23121 Anne E. Schroeder, Plaintiff, ■ -vs- . Walter F. Schroeder, Defendant. Walter F. Schroeder, whose place. ,of residence is unknown, will take notice that on the 24th day of March, 1943, Anne E. Schroeder filed her petition in this Common Pleas Court Of Greeiie County, Ohio, against him praying for a divorce, on the grounds of gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. Said petition will be for hearing on or after the 21st day of May, 1948, and the said Walter F. Schroeder is required to answer said Petitioru-on or before said date, or judgment may he taken granting the said Anne E. Schroeder a divorce* ANNE E. SCHROEDER, Plaintiff (4-2-6t-5-7) Smith, McCallister and Gibney Attorneys for the plaintiff. Ji** Your Mov©*-**” .Buy W ar BoaidaJ They GIVE TJ»*ir U*m , You LEND Your H o o e y 1 INVEST 10 PER CENT OF YOUR L a n a T u r n e r Robert Young In “ S l i g h t l y ^ Dangerous iliurjK. ‘ May # 1 Wk- ends S a t. “White Savage” * In Technicolor Starts Sunday “This Land Is Mine” % Chas. Laughton $at* May 6 p e e d End Kid* “ K e e p . ’Em S luggm g .‘S h e rto ck Ho lm es ~ln Washmgt°n BasilRothbone Sun. „ For | Tim Holt 4 Days J) «Red River RpLinhood” “T h e Falcon S trikes Back ' p m Sun: Mon. Vue*. “AIRvFORCE” with John Garfield ' Gig Young. --------------plus i ____ !___ _ “Vaudeville Days” a —: 1250 ItBAiONS Wii^yauShould A t t e n d i h i s z ■ THEATRES W e d n e s d a y HEINES' RINOL * 3 Eyes E x am in e d , A NAME THAT STANDS * FOR GOOD Glasses Pitted, Reasonable Charges. FURNITURE * Ur.C.E.Wilkin BUDGET FLAN AVAILABLE •*% Optometric Eye A d a i r ’s N, Detroit fit. 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Georj tinned at Pe on a short ft of his father, The Cedar ing group i - May 11, at Morton. Miss Doro‘ Supt. M. H. Schools, has with the mei The May i ' Club will m Gullough, T musical in , will be given Mrs^Creif Ark., T^he r with her pai Creswell. )• fered injuric- ported' impr< The Reses Mrs. Kling a nesday, Maj please call Harold Dob) guests you Maude El been telety) craft 'C6i, o! ferred'to W.. tary to-the a ■Division Wayne, Mic! Miss Turner James Ho - . Armor Sch . Field, Denv* entered Tc? • Florida. H •Finney, A. ( Boca Raton The Dorci, day afterno parlors* A: the member At the clos< tess, Mrs. L Ida Wright the seventei > Mrs. San i mouth, Ind. here with b , Tomlinson der) and h from Florii winters. I his brother v PSYCHOL! L it A. P* ,H. j, ogist of tin is to addre 5 sive Club, IR on “Child Mr. Hil) rector of Church at committee ministers Jamieson a ive UKWHiiHinimM fi Yv r P F Fn. Montey IVKN “T1>mr ALSO K Sun, t Ring “ROA NEWS V W «& r « w . a ♦JOURNi. SKLEC’1^ 31 \
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