The Cedarville Herald, Volume 67, Numbers 1-26

T H E C E P A l t V I L L E H E R A L D \ -I , f t-, ti f j *i & li'* BULL --- -------------- ^EDITOR AND PUBLISHER M M W >1M A mos .; OMo N*w*p*iw Awoc.; Miami V»ll»r F nm Awaa. Entered a t the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October S i, 1387, as second class matter. T FR ID A Y , JAN UA RY 2 1 ,1 3 4 4 CONFESSION OF FAITH (Continued from Pago.One)) . ; the street kept crying "catch the thief”. Such is the attitude of the so-called-Democratic press wearing a mother-hubbard, one of those garments that covers everything and touches nothing. If Herbert Hoover were president or even Abraham Lincoln, or George Washington, the New Deal party hacks would be championing the subject of the editorial we are reproducing from the Cleveland Plain Dealer, that evidently is being guided by its conscience and not dependent for support for succor from Washington or the 00,000 New Dealers in Ohio sucking the public, teat each month, rather than put muscle or brain behind the war effort as the banker^,’the baker or the candlestick maker. “ • CONFESSION OF FAITH Hereunder are published two editorials, written at different times, but by the same authentic spokesman of the Plain Dealer. "Added together, they represent truly where this paper stands todays in a changing world, as fa r as are concerned our views about the 1 present administration in Washington. "We reserve, till a later occasion the. right to express our ideas a- bout who ought to be the next, president of the United States. WE WAITED IN VAIN The other, night, after reading a lot of • Plato and John Staurt Mill, we wrote an editorial about .President Roosevelt. We .did not publish It, because we feared it was too tough. “And we thought it only-fair, since the president was scheduled ■ to talk the next day, to hold our fire. "Also, we remembered only too poignantly,, as editors, our dual . obligations which are a t once to criticise phonies and to advance that openess of spirit, that indivisibility of resolve that is America. “Having all that in mind we waited, we hoped, we prayed, we list- ened. «;.■ s^BJjt ail we heard was the same old dulcet voice, leading the same old Children of Faith into the same old- Slough of Despond.. - • ' What he said simply would not and could not add up, a t least as long a s ’two and two make four. • "“And ao we finally decided that we couldn’t go for it, because the president obviously was trying to ride two horses at once. “While on the one hand, by his advocacy of the universal conscrip­ tion idea he was espousing a cause which organized labor was sure to oppose (he had given them everything, including a Supreme Court and a little bit, too, of his sacred honor, but they had proved ungrateful), ■he had offered them Heaven in his Second Bill of Rights. “And if in that he did not promise “the sky, the sea, the silver moon,” we can not read simple English. # . “In fact, in that single speech he covered the whole world-ex­ cept one particular subject, namely, who by honest work was going to pay for it. 1 “Ask the sky, the sea, the silver moon. , “They will know as much about it as Secretary Morganthau, or even, the president himself, who is a .much smarter politician. . “And so we shall-publish the editorial we wrote the other night, the logic of which has not been in the least impaired- by the latest expression of the president,.consented to enthusiastically by the al­ phabetical agencies. . . . Its title: - WE WANT TO BELIEVE “We believe in God, our Father Almighty. “We believe in our country. " "We want to believe in our president, our commander in chief. ♦ s ■ i » "Why, then, does.he make it so hard for us to believe in him? "He is such a good guy. “He is a complete gentleman. “He even dares quote Horace before a congregation of iron mold- ItlllllilUtlltllllllllttMmtM IM AM UMUMAIIUIItlUmM lllllliNim* The Nels^n-Hopkins letter scandal in Washington has been a big topic this week. / The letter referred to ‘!Windy¥ WiUkje as the next Republi­ can nomine? with Hopkins backing, Developments this week are that the letter was ’‘forged” by one second in command under Sec. Ickes.- Suddenly the office aid disappeared. Ickes in a .hop-skip-jump .lands at the White House for a conference. Next he is before the'grand jury boldly no doubt claiming that ’ e knows nothing a- bout the letter. He fires the office assistant, Briggs, Look .out for the next broadcast;. It will be “Hush is the word. Na harm done by the let­ ter other than set “Windy” back few notches in' his campaign as the Wall Street “fair-haired boy” for the presidency. Some crafty work going on these days to keep the “Kin’ in the front row. Briggs might not be as far away as you think. Hopkins is in a government hospital “sick” and the grand jury cannot hear what he has to say. Then Briggs if put oh the witness stand might open up a new subject to embarrass the New Deal. In a game of deceit, trickery, :ntrigue and falsification, the founda­ tion of the New Deal, you cannot predict .what will happen; , \ ii . i ■' ■■ ■A" few evenings ago Fulton Lewis, fr., radio commentator took the hide iff both Roosevelt and Hopkins jn what the public should regard a ’rime. Hopkins As supposed to be ill in the Navy Hospital, erected by the government for injured and sick men in the navy.' I t is one of the best in the world and has the best medical staff known. Meantime our boys who fell in battle on the various fronts are being returned injured by the thousand. The hospital is reported full to overflowing with boys in the halls and hundreds turned away on cots. Meantime by Presidential or der Hopkins occupies the palatial suite of rooms by himself where a dozen of your boys in need of care might be quartered. Other, boys are •quartered in cheap -hospitals or vvherevey they can be parked. And we cuss Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini! The boys on return are going to cure a lot of things. Over here their vote' will count1-over there no. one can expect a fair, vote, especially when you examine some army con­ tracts with the' graft attached. DO NOT FORGET YOUR PART IN THE WAR BOND DRIVE While the campaign has opened for the Fourth War Bond drive, in this county the local solicitors will canvass the town Monday and con­ tinued until each citizen has had a chance to purchase an' extra $100 War Bond. ’ r The purchase of bonds is not a gift but an investment or loan to the government when yoq get ^your mon­ ey back with interest. The more you invest in bonds the less inc&me taxer will be on all classes. Failure to sub scribe would mean higher taxes ant more taxes in other forms. ' Greene county has a quota of $1,« .>23,000. Sales this week so far in the county . amount at present, to $132,000. ' LEGAL NOTICE E rnest Schultz, whose place of res* idenca is unknown and cannot with reasonable diligence’ be ascertained, will take notice that'on the 10 th day of December, Addie Schultz filed her certain action against him in divorce on the grounds of extreme cruelty and gross neglect of duty, said cause be­ ing Case No. .23,347 on the docket of the Common Pleas Court of Greene County, Ohio, and that said matter will come for hearing on or after. January 22, 1944. ' . ■. Attorney for plaintiff. ’ FOREST DUNKLE, -i (12-17-6H-15) Any excuse you can give for not upping your payroll sav­ ings will please Hitler, Biro- hito and puppet Mussolini. Public Sale! As I have rented my farm, I will hold a closing out sale at my farm located 4 1-2 miles Northwest of Gedarville, 6 miles Eact of Xenia, on Clark’s Run road, one mile north off the Clifton-Wilberforce pike, beginning promptly at 12 O’CLOCK NOON, on TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8th, 1944 The following property will be sold: , S— — HEAD OF HORSES ---- 5 One bay mare 9 years old, weight 1700 lbs.; One bay mare 5 year.s old, wt. 1550, lbs.; One sorrel gelding 5 years old, wt. 1800 lbs.; One sorrel gelding, 5 ys old, wt. 1700 lbs.; One bay gelding 3 yrs. old, wt. 1500 lbs. All horses are well broken and good workers. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of; Mary Jane McMillan, De­ ceased- / Notice is hereby given that James C. McMillan ha^/been duly appointed as Administrator of the estatq. of Mary Jane McMillan, deceased, late of Cedarville; Greene County, Ohio. Dated tjns 29th *day of October, 1943. ■ WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judgp of the Probate Court, Greene_ County, Ohio. - SPRINGFIELD MOVIES Now Showing LEGAL NOTICE Eugene C. Rice, residing at Dormi­ tory B. Warner Robins, Ga., will take notice that on the 11 th day of Janu­ ary, 1944, Marjorie Rice filed her cer­ tain petition for divorce against him on the grounds of gx-oss neglect of duty. Said cause of action, being case No. 23393 on the Docket of the Com­ mon Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio. That said cause will dome on for hear- .ing on or after the 26th day of Febru­ ary, 1944. ‘ MARCUS SHOUP; Attorney for Plaintiff (l-14-6t-2-18) ANNE BAXTER Walter Huston In • “THE NORTH STAR” with Walter Brennan Thurs. Jan. 20 1 Wk. Ends Sat. “ Nite T 77 TT HEAD OF CATTLE 9 era. t “He is not ashamed 'of being educated. “We heartily support his war policy. And we like that a lot. “His wife, too, is. gentle. Some criticise her because she traipses around so much. So do we. If she really knew as much as she lets on. she does about such a variety of subjects as she discusses daily in her column, God would be out of a job. “But nevertheless she is a gentlewoman, kihd to a fault to the oppressed and the- unhappy, and that's enough for us. She belongs.’ She believes in the same kind of noblesse oblige that we believe in, though our definitions differ. "To get back to the president. “He seems to have the greatest combination of noble and screwy ideas we ever saw. “He does the darndest things. “He will sick his Department of Justice, or some other depart­ ment or^agency of government, on business men with an almost sa- ’distic glee. He will harry them with infinite snoopers. ‘‘If all else fails, they will be found guilty of just being alive, "But he will not lift his hand against the terrorists, grafters and boodlers in the labor movement.- “He will tolerate by bland inaction the most incredible invasions of individual liberty in the name of organized labor. "Because it was widely disseminated in the public prints, we must assume that he was completely aware of and yet did nothing when a crowd of goons stood at the employment gates, of a government plant like Ravenna ordnance works in our own state, and made it quite clear that nobody of the building crafts would work in creating that establishment, which we were to buy and pay for with our own tax­ payer’s money, until he had joined a union—and paid a/smacking big entrance fee. , "Great God, was there ever such an outrageous holdup in the World ? ■"Yet, the next day our president, as likely as not, went on the air and butter would not melt in his mouth. ■' "He was all for America. ' "Whose America ? . "That indeed is tl/c question/ » “We still want to believe in him. There is so much noble and good in him. He lias such a tough job. And he could make it so easy for us to'believe in him. “We shall never admit, that the age of miracles is past. . ‘‘And so we look forward confidently to the day that Franklin D, Roosevelt will make, on some happy occasion, a speech in which he betrays a fleeting interest in, and directs at least a smiling, sidelong glance toward, the mah who runs the business, who does not enjoy the ineffable.advantage of wearing overalls, who works with his head as well as with his hands, who has made America, built its farms, its railroads and its industrial plants, who pays its taxes and who loves his country just as much as the boas of the National Maritime Union. “Then the morning stars will sing together, “Hallelujah,” and our filth 1 Will be niade whole'.” • Now it is the Japs and Kentuck­ ians that are the subject of an edi- torial in the “Wallace Farmer,” It seems the Japs are preferred to the farm labor .from the Blue- Grass state for western farms. The editor­ ial fired the blood of the Kentuckians who poured telegrams into Washing­ ton about /the insult— V. P. Wallace even ' getting a number. The vice president is listed in the publication as “Editor on Leave” . The bankers hold control of the money end of the institution. From a business- point of view the Wallace management was about on par with the Morganthau fling in the dairy business. Not so many think much of the Morganthau management of our fiscal affairs, only at his willing, hod of the head to keep oii spending and heaping the national debt. This tickles Roosevelt also for he likes to gloat over big things. Strange for his father was just the opposite and accumulated a fortune and then protected it by will. How many recall the congressional debate on “pay as you go” taxes? We hear much grumbling among far­ mers who cannot understand the hodge-podge collection plan. Even lawyers cannot understand and are about up to their necks in the mys­ tery game. The Ruml plan Roosevelt said was a gift to millionaires Now. the $35 a week laborers find them­ selves getting collection notices and they cannot understand who went back on the promise of “forgiveness.' One Guernsey cow, 4 years old, due to freshen in March. One brindle cow, 5 years old, fresh by day of sale. One Shorthorn Jersey cow, 6 years old, due to freshen in March. Four yearling heifers, 3 Guernsey and one Jersey. All heifers are pasture bred. All tested for bangs and T. B. One Hereford cow 2 1-2 years old with bull calf, 11 months old, extra good. •. 7 5 ------ HEAD OF HOGS------- 75 10 brood sows due to farrow in March and April. One full-blooded Berkshire Boar 1 1-2 years old; 44 shoats wt. 100 to 125. lbs. 20 shoats wt. 50 to 60 lbs; -Ail hogs doubly immuned. 126 —_H E A D OF SHEEP 126 14 Delaine breeding ewes; 12 Shropshire ^reeding ewes, to lamb in April. 100 . head of feeding lambs (If not sold before date of sale). —_ F A R M IMPLEMENTS ------ One Farmall F20 tractor, 2-bottom 14 inv breaking plow/ One bottom 14- in. breaking plow, cultivators for tractor and one power take-off. McCormick Peering binder, 7 ft. cut; Buckeye 12 disc wheat drill with fertilizer attach­ ment; McCormick-Deering 6 ft. mower; Double disc with tractor hitch. Cul- tipacker. steel tooth hay rake, hay tedder,! 50 tooth spike hori-ow, John Deere corn planter, with 126 rods of wire, fertilizer attachment; 2 two-row cultiva­ tors ,/3 wagons, one with box-bed, two with flat tops, John Deere Manure sprchder, single shovel potato plow, double shovel cultivator, corn shelter, corn chopper. i 0 in: feed grinder; hog, waterer with heater 4 sides leather tug work harness; one side of harness with chain traces, Collars, lines and bridles; Gas engine, 6 hp. 10 gal. spray pump; Power clipper, Double trees, single trees. -Lot of small items too numerous to list. , " — FEED AND SEED _ _ 500 bu. extra good corn in crib. (Also some corn in shock).- 10 tons of mixed hay, timothy and clover. Also some baled shredded fodder. TERMS OF SALE —_ CASH Frank B. Tn rnbu ll Weikert &-Gordon, Aucts. •” OWNER Lunch on Grounds by Methodist Ladies. LEGAL NOTICE Marion H. Swain, A-. S. B5-G78 re -’ siding at United States Maritime Ser­ vice Training Station, Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, N. Y. will take notice that on the 3rd day of January, 1944, >lelen V. Swaim filed her certain ac­ tion against him for divorce on the grounds of extreme cruelty being case No- 23,387, on the Docket of the Com­ mon Pleas Court of Greene County, Ohio, said cause will come on for hear ing on or after the 19th day of Feb­ ary, 1944. MARCUS SHOUP, Attorney for Plaintiff. (l-7-6t-2-ll) “WHERE ARE YOUR CHILDREN?” Coming Sunday Claudette Colbert - Fred MacMurray IN “NO TIME FOR LOVE” NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT TOP BURNER FLAME ON YOUR GAS RANGE i-m i M p r - WASTES PRECIOUS NATURAL GJlS ' “’SpWs*# • Inflation is like a rubber toy bal­ loon. It can be depressed or expand­ ed but with more air. That is the rqii wage controversy. The labor board said an increase in wages was inflation. Byrnes and Vinson said 4c an hour increase would nbt be. The railroad unions did not care for they wanted more. Then came the strike when the railroads became govern­ ment property over night. Two unions accepted the Roosevelt pro­ posal which was more than other gov­ ernment agencies would allow and stand by the "L ittle, Steel” formula to hold the line—as Rooseveljj, want­ ed. The other unions all came a- cross and dropped the strike after Roosevelt offered them more money than they asked for. More than four cents an hour increase was inflation but 11 cents an hour givfen by Roose­ velt was not inflation. Are you cer­ tain two and two makes four? Is it any wbnder a Democratic editor has to worry so much on what to write that will not nlake him either an idiot or n fool in the public eye? The odor of the New Deal will never die out w.ith a 300 billion public debt to be paid by posterity. Other suggestions to help you SAVE . ' '"'e * 'k & iX ^ COOK WITH A *-aw FLAME Don’t light the burner until you are ready to use it. Keep the flame as low as possible to do the cooking. Re­ member, you can’t heat water hotter than boiling, no matter how much heat you apjply, and you can boil water just as well with a low level flame, Don’t.allow tea kettles or open pots containing water to steam for NATURAL GAS jong periods on top burners, Turn off Cook "one-dish" meals , , , . , , , on lop burners. Cook the gas the instant you have finished Automobile Mutual Estate of J. Ervin Kyle, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that Jennie M. Kyle has been duly appointed as Executrix of the estate, of J. Ervih Kyle,-’deceased, late of Cedarv’iile, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 29th day of December, 1943. WILLIAM B; McCALLISTER . Judge of the Probate Court/ Greene County, Ohio. | When ACCIDENTS Happen H . You N e e d , I PROMPT SERVICE 1 STATE 1 INSURANCE | ' Non-Assessable 1 KENNETH LITTLE I 1 c ed a rv il l e ; O h io s RHEUMATISM??? RINOL is the medicine you need. Proven succe—’fiil for arthritis, rheumatism, neuritis, lumbago. Free pamphlet at Brown’s Drug Store Richard Arlen Jean Parker IN “MINESWEEPER” PLUS “THE SULTAN’S DAUGHTER” A n n e C o H o XfiJRBANKS S u n . \ • F o r i] H o o t; G ib s o n t Day* / Ken Maynard “WESTWARD BOUND” PLUS “MYSTERY BROADCAST” “Pistol Packlh’ Mama” W ITH Ruth Terry PLUS “ INVASION” Sun. Mon. .*’' 0 * 8 . /O flE L D ■ ES „ iwing Mrs. Jennet visiting in X returned horn Mrs. Burt - the Kensingi Thursday a ft Mi-, .and tered the Oh County Com Columbus las ’ • Mr. James been ill a t -It reported muc able to be re few days. V h e r e Miss Anna J YOUR ed theWoman Thursday ai t program and guests, ved.and a so TIME Claude C .l ''OVE” ly of this of £ Camp Peary, en a position the camp pi’ near William ' Pvt. Georg- r ^en been assign-*! ’^te r Training BalT* _.R„ Camp JSdisorVELri:* on the Atlaii-Vs . — ULTAN’S Pvt. RichiuiHTER’ Knox, Ky. a.f CoHo the Wheeled will be trainHjrTT trucks in .roIT^J^ boot Gibson , ;en Maynard unc.c. tsTW i&r'.D sv trip 10|OUND” e has been j PLUS ’ry since DtfSTERY n a twenty ! j*DCAST” h r Air Cor ate .in the D R E N ? ” S u n d a y WU.4 Colbert cMurray 1450 ->s. lfanLc|<|n, hursday frda” Springs, CcV'Jkf Wrs. R. A. ,rLu | rry law.. She sjtASION" her daughte^-y- , route east. Mrs. Will Shopji'erd) , was complii; at the homi with Mrs. 1 C. H., Mrs. and Mrs. G- as hosts ah present froi dessei’t cou and Mrs. W ton on. Dec formerly cc * High School 1111111111,(11,iiniiiiii,iihip { FARMS FOB SALE AND ] I FARM LOANS! FWe’have mahy~gocidYarms for sale | | on easy terms. Also make, farm | | loans at 4 % interest for 15 years, i | No application fee and no apprais-1 I al fee. | • Write or Inquire | | McSavaney &/'Co. London O. I Leon H. Kling, Mgr. . | TntlllllMItllllllllHtlMllllllimiMIIIMIIIMlIllllllllimilllMIIMlIlT A NAME THAT STANDS | FOR GOOD j FURNITURE BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE Adair rs N. Detroit St, Xenia, O. | b n > m n H M n ii in in ii n iiH H u i» m n .« u i..u ...,— — ii n i . n ^ IttllllltllM IIH IIItllllllllk lllllllllllim illlllllllH lIllllllllliltllU li Experienced Typists and Clerical Workers. Steady em­ ployment, pleasant working oondi-. tlons, good pay. McCall Corporation 2219 McCall St. Dayton, O. WANTED If most .now—in jobs— d sometim Why this- wni . You c new fr things work to Truck Driver for Cream Route Man or Woman. The / gently. .For ful The Miami Valley Cooperative Milk Producers Association ’ est U,- S.( (your loc the addrei Dayton, Ohio. General ij Washingll mmiimiimiiMMtiMiiiKiiHiiii,ntmtiiniMinnniniin, | Pipe, Valves and Fittings for j | water, gas and steam, Hand and 1 | Electric Pumps for all purposes, I | Bolts. Pulleys, V Belts, Plumbing * * nnminmiiiiil meed Tj orkers. St< iasant work; Corpora ill St. Dayto: /ANTEI cooking. Everybody must use less— —of least 15% less— to avoid rationing. ir for Crea man, [Valley, Coo ucers Ass< ton, Ohio. res and find steam, £ nps for a ll, j I*, V Belts, } Supplies. FrijBOCKLI * D o u 4 p L Y C whole meals in the oven, Don’t use the top burn­ ers or the oven of your range for heat­ ing the kitchen . Don’t use running hot water for washing dishes, hands, o r ‘for shaving,

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