The Cedarville Herald, Volume 68, Numbers 1-26
THE C1DAR.VILLE HERALD BPUU — — —- — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER *m * t <m> # m m * Aw**.} * * * ***"• * Ent*ntd At tho Post Office, Cedarville, 0>io, October 81,1887, a* second e lw matte*. FRIRAY, APRIL 20,1948, PRESIDENT TRUMAN STATES HIS POSITION Praeidet Harry Truman in his addroseto Congress and to thAnation was dignified, without the personal pronoun‘T ’, and absent of the theatrical that has been the background for other reports to the nation; Mr, Truman made it plain that he will see that the war is carried to a successful conclusion. He has taken a position he wishes to hold the confidence of congress and asks cooperation, something again that will be a return to a policy of other administrations, He indicates that congress should function in a legislative way and carr' part of the bur- don, thus wiping out the bureaucratic methou of legislating as we have experienced for twelve years. He won American ap plause when he stated he wanted an administration aBprovided for in the Constitution. He possesses a pleasing: voice and evi dently realizes he is not superhuman nor capable of being such for he asked for the prayers of the nation in undertaking what may be more of a task than he, his advisors or the public now realize. Secret pledges, if there have been any inade, will no doubt come to the surface in the coming San Francisco confer ence. So far the speech made a favorable impression. In time 'he no doubt will weed out the pinks that have decorated the various governmental departments in recent years undermin ing our established constitutional government. Unless the Com munistic set are uprooted and replaced by men in whom the na tion has confidence, the new President will have failed to make good his promise in his maiden speech. His experience as a member of the Senate will greatly aid him in guiding the ship of state. His task will be no easy one to fullfil. VILLAGE SHOULD PROCEED WITH DISPOSAL PLANT With plans already prepared for a sewerage disposa plant, council should revive the proposition which has been dor mant for many months, and make another effort to finance ant complete the necessary improvement. 1 Council qould not well attempt a renewal following the rejection of a bid far beyond the estimate, but conditions, have changed since that time. There is more labor now and evident ly victory is'much nearer, so that we will have an over-supply of both labor and material when that comes; The government . at this time is cancelling and reducing war contracts, one Day ton concern loosing a million dollar order for war material. With the disposal plant the village will be able to con struct more sanitary sewers to relieve a condition about town that has been a problem for sanitation. Another factor there is a large number of properties {along the sewerage system tha have not been connected as provided under ordinance passed when the system was first installed. ' - m It is certain the village cannot go on month after month ' and year after year, with no legal location for a disposal plant. Live sewerage is running in an open ditch in violation of state law and by sufferage of the owner of the la d to a pond on his property. The owner has on several occasions warned the vil lage that the condition must be corrected.. He has been aware of labor conditions and the scarcity of materials and has been lenient in not pressing his claims by force through the courts ‘ One more indication that we should proceed .with the im provement is that'Xenia has asked for bids for a disposal plan; that will cost over $100,000. We are informed that city can get a priority for any material needed. If so, then the village can get the necessary material. . QUR LACK OF MEAT If you ask any stock raiser what is the cause for the short; . age of beef, he will tell you it is not because of any shortage of cattle. The trouble, is the law of supply and demand has been abolished. The feed used'in fattening stall-fed cattle has gone up in price, so that a man using $10 worth of fe$d to fatten a steer only gets about $4 back. The government in fixing high prices for cattle feed has made it impossible for stock raisers to operate properly. Of course, grass-fed cattle are on the mar ket* hut their meat is not prime. However, the great meat dealers say the real trouble is that the Armyihas been a hog. It has bought meat far ahead of its needs. The Army has thousands of tons of frozen meat In storage. It has so much that presently it may release some of it for<civilian use. But there you are! The meat shortage is not adequate* but because of government restrictions and enor mous purchases. —Cincinnati Enquirer FRISCO PARLEY A MESS We can’t see that the President (Roosevelt) has helped bad matter by dropping his demand for multiple United4States votes in the proposed league assembly if Russia and Britain have them. It is still a mess anyway you look at it. Never was there less, excuse for a disasterous dispute a- mong Allies than this threat to the San Francisco conference The Big Three had agreed at Dumbarton Oaks on one assembly vote for each nation-—one of their few unchallenged decisions. This has become an issue because of Stalin's grab for more power, Churchill’s unwillingness to sacrifice an extra India vote to head off the Russian demand* and Roosevelt’s faith in trick Hence the secrecy of the deal in the first place, and the hocus-pocus explanations when the thing leaked out. The of ficial Washington justification of the President’s agreements to Stalin’s demand for separate votes fbr White Russia and the Ukraine is their war effort. But obviously similar justification could be offered for other units of the U, S. S. R., or for Scot land or the state of Texas, The semi-official justification offered in Washington aiu Moscow is that Britain has six votes to one each for the United States and Russia. This revives the old Seriate dispute which helped to keep the United States out of the League of Nations. It is aphony. The four British dominions—Canada, Australia New Zealand and South Africa—are actually independent o: the United Kingdom, though they often try to agree on common policy as at the current London Dominion Conference. But Britain does not cdntrol India, which is presumably why Churchill with two votes had to accept Stalin’s demand for three and Roosevelt’s counter-demand for three. Of course, there was nothing wrong with the President’s desire for United States equality with Russia and Britain. His method was wrong, That involved* besides secrecy, the accept ance of an arbitrary figure of three without relation to reality in Russia or the United States and without exact ratio to Brit ain. It also involved a multiple voting principle traditionally unacceptable to the United States and most of the Allies. The President’s half-reversal in one way has compounded the blunder. By withdrawing the American counter-claim' ac cepted by Stalin and Churchill* while still supporting Russia's claim* the President would leave the United States with one vote afeainst Britan’s two and Russia three. That Is not accept able to the United States delegation* or to the small nations. The above editorial w*a taken from the Cleveland, O.* Press, strong sup porter of the New Deal in the past and published previous to Thursday* April It* 1945, like' sente other famous.oonferencfB that have been held the past f«Wmonths where the prose mid public were excluded* the public,has had no first band Hifortnatlon. Just how Much has been- pledged to Britain and to Roasto* not even members of Congress have a record. Only by keeping the doors o f the San Frnndsco Conference open to the public will our own people ev*r know or just what part We have played in world politic* under the guise Hi iswrtfffit “W«r|d Pea®*.’ No Min should gloat 'Over the death of any Man* of higje or low estate* yet the Atnerioett people tohst and will demand flMfiMl Ift eonneetloA with that which might he a yoke around the hWka of gWkmtfy <if yreeent generations, to t of generations yet Unborn* '—The Editor A t times we hav<> mentioned the possibility of union labor being forced for most all farm labor. We were in formed by a CIO organizer of other labor. Today mention of the ‘AFL is refered to in County Agent Drake’s column. We have been following the “Teamster”, official paper o f that organization. In that branch the or ganization plans to unionize all truck drivers, commercial, that gather milk, Another movement is to organize all truckers to control movement of grain and livestock. Stockhandlers in all stockyards in the city terminals where there are packing houses will be organized. Livestock not trucked by a member of the union will be re jected. The CIO had the ear of the White House until Pres. Truman took over. Just how fa r the unions will be given government backing will not be determined until specific cases are laid on the White House desk now. One thing was ' sure had there not been a change,- the dairy farmer and the livestock feeder was to be the first to feel the lash of organized labor. Now it turns out that Harry Hop kins is drawing $15,000 a year by t presidential order. The present ad ministration did not make such an order and there is speculation wheth er the authority that is supposed to have granted it was physically able to know what he .was signing, Hopkins is. a patient in the Mayo hospital aricl was listed a t $10,000 a year. He is now paid out of a presidential fund and no other' government authority can stop the increase, Hopkins lived at the White House for several years a t the* expense of the income taxpayers. He left, the “free eats” following a ‘bust-up' between Harry'* wife and Mrs, ‘My Day’; Daring the New Deal more people have licked up government paid for food at the White House than during the terms of the previous sixe presidents or a- bout twenty five years. Jimmy Byrnes had a blow up with the Commander-In-Chief and left for his South Carolina home. A lot of things contributed to the disagree' ment. One was,the changing of the vote a t the coming conference, at San Francisco conference. Another was the mess created by OPA and the meat shortage. A, blow; to presiden tial prestage was the congressional refusal to provide for the control of all labor in the ''nation. Continued bickering and reported grafting by highup appointees would create tt dis order in any body's liver. To add to presidential'worries was the vote of the coal miners 8 to 1 to strike if wage increase was.not granted. I t w s b known the minors would demand the increase when increases had been granted CIO unions, The biggest ob stacle was that the government could not make the miners return to work even if the - government siezed the coal mines. One can soon build for himself a mountain of trouble when keeping the cards above' the table. In contrast with the above record we now find Jimmy Byrnes one of the first Democrats Pres. Truman called to the White House for conference That means much to the so-called “Palace Guadd” (Communistjs) that were behind the scene workers in the White House by presidential pleasure. Word from Washington this week is that this crowd did not show up when the White House doors opened Mon day morning. The radio announces that we are to have another cut in issuance of auto tires and probably as much as one- third over the past month, Summer time is here when the old tires will fade like a noon-day mist. Months ago the head of the synthetic rubber In dustry, financed by the government* said we soon would have a sufficient supply of that kind of rubber that would insure tires for automobiles. Not so long ago one of the big tire companies tried out their synthetic tires on the Indianapolis speedway a t 100 miles per hour for five hours, The tost was regarded rem akable* We are told the tire industry has been held up because if could not get lampblack for rubber, a necessary compound for which there is no sub stitute for strengthening synthetic rubber* This material is made by $ number of oil companies, and is a by product, The OPA 'has set a price go low on it the companies are not Will ing to Increase production, OPA eays the companies make money on other products and should make lampblack a t a loss* This would apply to farm products. The OPA could say you make money oil hogs So feed cattle a t a loss or no profit. That is the rea son synthetic rubber ip scarce. There is another factor in the tire business, The companies are operajtod by the unions, There was a time when the companies could control output but not under the Hillman, CIO. Tire Makers get more money making less tires than more tires. The New Deal approves the plan. The company la helpless and you, are helpless I f ,you cannot get a new tire when'you need 11; „After all it comes down to the ode premise, “Did you or did you not tote for the syttam tftat will keep you ]!Wrt getting another tire undetf New Deal Russianized regimentation?*' The deUWe^M^seing of pmdfay to* tereeto laet year jhaa paid dividend*, Managed economy has left town and city folks without chicken* for the table right at the time when beef and pork are scarce, The OPA has upped the price slightly but not to cover the increased cost of feed. The bog feed er has his double-cross decoration by the New Deal and he cut production to a point where folks are finding out that braintruster* are not the people to trust to produce food for the table, Tp fool the farmer once more the X)PA puts 50c a hundred more to the floor price under hogs. Do not look for a yery large increase In hog pro duction on such a promise especially when hogs are $14.90. Take off the ceiling price and see if hogs do not reach the meat stores and pork to be found on the family table. Pork chops now retail for a higher price than was paid during World War I when hogs brought $23 a hundred in Cedarville. To talk about $20 bogs brings up the AAA speeches months ago that any thing more than 10c hogs would mean inflation, therefore we must go hack to panic ,days and start with hogs at the price a t that time—-we believe they call it parity. Most formers have another name for it* even the AAA supporter who shops around to. get $14 today or more if he can find a blackmarket operator. ' The old battle is on between the political parties in Congress; . The Democrats seem determined to mon key with the tariff and are demand ing legislation that would give the president authority to reduce tariffs fifty percent. Various excuses are offered why it is necessary. One is that we must let farm products come into this country, even to be sold in competition with present crops, and a large carry-over- of wheat, to aid in bringing about, “peace’’ among the nations. Last year the New Deal let Canada unload ten million bushels of wheat in this country when the gov ernment was buying American wheat and giving it away to other countries to help maintain the bottom or guar anteed price to our farmers.. The New Deal also sold several million bushels of edible wheat'to be ground for stock food. To permit beef to‘ come in from Argentine under a low tariff, wool and mutton from Austral ia and various other crops from dif ferent countries, probably will not set well with the American fanner* With wages high in industrial lines that produce farm machinery* and the con trolled price of farm products now only bringing the farmer a 69c dol lar, how will he fare -when market prices drop with an overloaded mar ket of farm produce ? About the last thing the farmer wants is Democratic free trade under controlled prices by half' baked Communists. LEGAL NOTICE Pvt. Wilbur W. Wade, 35512300, £470th Q. M. Trk. Co. (Avn.) A. P.O. 650, Gate Postmaster New York, New York, is hereby notified that Betty June Wade has filed a petition against him through her next friend, Delores Naylor, in the Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, the same being Case No. 23818, praying for a divorce on the ground of Gross. Neglect of Duty, and that said cause will come on for hepringfsix full weeks from the date of the final publication hereof, DAN M, AULTMAN, Attorney for Plaintiff LEGAL NOTICE Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, Gale B. Robinette, Plaintiff Vs. No, Belle Robinette, Defendant, Belle Robinette, whose last place of residence was R R 6, West View, Kingsport, Tenn„ will take notice that on.the 24th day of March, 1945, Gale B. Robinette filed his petition against her in Common Pleas Court of Greene County, Ohio, for divorce on tbe ground of gross neglect of duty, and that unless the said Belle Robinette shall answer said petition on or be fore the 11th day of May, 1945* judg ment may be taken granting plaintiff a divorce. GALE B, ROBINETTE,, Plaintiff (3-30-6t-54) Smith, McCnllister & Gibney, Attorneys for Plaintiff LEGAL NOTICE Edna Elizabeth Freitag, whose last known address w*s $2J7 Wood- lawn Bouvelard, Glenda}c, 27, pong Island* New York* is hereby notified thatFrank Freitag, has iilpd a peti tion for divorce against her on the ground of Grogs Neglect of Duty and Extreme Cruelty in the Common Pleas Court, Greene County, the game being Case No, 23801* and that said cause vtill come on for hearing six full weeks from the date of the first publication hereof, (4-20 Gfc* 6-25) BENJAMIN NORN, tT. B, Building* Dayton* Ohio Attorney for Plaintiff. POULTRY We pay highest prices fo r rab bits, ducks, turkeys,* fries* hens* and roosters^ * GINIVAN POULTRY PLANT XENIA* OHIO mnm Pyfe With theTfavys Dry, Brown Okinawa Like Indiana in Late Summer Natives Live Poorly, However; Cultivate Small Farm Tracts < 1 ? By E rn ie P y le OKINAWA.—Since this island is the closest to Japan we’ve landed on and since we seem to feel this really is Japan, rather than just some far outpost, I’ll try to describe to you what it looks like. . . , ♦ Actually it doesn’t look a g r e a t' deal different from most of Amer ica. In fact it looks Ernie Pyle much more like Am e ric a th an anything the ma rines have seen for the last three years. The climate is temperate rather than tropical, and so is the vegeta tion. There are tropical-like trees on and near the beaches—I think they’re Pandanus bushes. ' But (here are also' many trees of the fir family with horizon tal limbs. The country over which my regi ment passed during the first two days was cultivated. It rose gradu ally from the sea and was all formed into small fields. It didn’t look a t all unlike Indiana in late summer when things have ‘started to turn dry and brown, ex cept that the fields were much smaller. The wheat, which looks just like ours, is dead ripe in the fields now. The marines are cutting it with little sickles. In other fields are cane and sweet potatoes, Each field has a ditch around its edge, and dividing the fields are lit tle ridges about two feet wide. On top of the ridges are paths where the people walk. All through the country are little dirt lanes and now and then a fairly decent gravel .road. '■■■■' As you get inland, the country be comes rougher, In. the hills there is less cultivation and more trees, It is really a pretty country. We had read about what a worthless place Okinawa was, but I think most of us have been surprised about how pretty it is. Poverty and Filth Continue Together Okinawa ,civilians we bring in are pitiful. The only ones left seem to be real old>or real young. And they all are verv very poor; • They’re l .*,c very clean. And their homes are utterly filthy. Over and over you hear marines say, “This could be a nice country if the people weren’t' so dirty.’’ . Obviously their living standard is low. Yet I’ve never understood why poverty and filth need to be synony mous. A person doesn’t have to be well off to get clean. But appar ently he has to be well off to want to keep clean* We’ve found it that way d e a r around the world. The people here dress as we gee Japa nese dressed in pictures: women in kimonos and old men in skin-tight pants; Soma wear a loose, knee- length ’ garment th a t shows their skinny legs. * The kids are cute as kids are all over the world* I’ve noticed ma rines reaching out and tousling their hair as they marched past them. We’re rounding up all the civilians and putting them In camps. They are puzzled by it all. Most of the farm families must have got out when our heavy bom bardments started. Lots of fahn houses have either been demolished or burned ,to the ground before we came, Often, in passing a wrecked farmhouse, you smell the sickening odor of death inside. But there are always people who won’t leave no matter what. We 'couldn't help foeling sorry for the Okinawans we Picked up in the first fow days. We found twp who spoke • little English. They had once lived to Hawaii* One wap an Old man who had • son (Hawailan-Japanese) somewhere to the American army! They were all shocked from the bombardment and yet I think rather stupid too, so that when they talked they didn’t make much sense. J don’t believe they had any idea Of what it was all about. As one marine officer laid, “The poor dev ils. I’ll bet they think thie is the end of the world/’ They were obviously scared to death. On Love-Day the marines found many of them hiding from us to caves. They found two old wom en, 75 or more, to a cave* caring for a paralyzed girl. She wasn’t wounded, just paralyzed from nat ural causes, One of the old ladies had a small* dirty sack with some money to it. When the marines found her the cried and tried to give them the money—hoping; I suppose that she could buy herself pif from being executed. After all the propaganda they've been fed about our tortures, it’s go ing to be a befuddled bunch of Oki nawans when they ' discover we brought right along with us, as part of the intricate invasion plan, enough supplies to feed them, too! ■■ ■*. * .* During our first afternoon on Oki nawa my group of marine's went about a mile and a half inland. Our vehicles were not ashore yet, so we had to pack on our backs everything we had. Personally, I was overladen as usual. I had two canteens, a mu sette bag, a blanket rolled up in a poncho, three rubber life preserv ers, a shovel, and assorted knives, first aid kits, etc. Furthermore, I had on two pairs of pants* was car rying two jackets, and it' was hotter than hell. Anyhow, we finally got where we were going. We stopped on a hill side, threw down our gear, connect ed " our phones to wires on the ground, and were ready for busi ness. That is, the others were. Me, I lay down on the grassland rested for an hour. ■ \ Find* Nice Spot To Go to Sleep After that we began getting ready for the night. We figured the Japs would bomb us all night, that their artillery would soon start up from the hills, and that, when it got dark, some slinky infiltrators would start infiltration. So we dug foxholes, The slope was so steep I chose a nice depres sion a t the foot of a small, embank ment that didn’t require much dig ging. Now we come to the life preserv ers. You may have wondered yhy 1 was carrying three lifebelts on dry land. ' Well, X knew what I was do ing all right. I just blew up my three life pre servers, Bpread them to the foxhole and I had the nicest improvised Sim mons you ever saw. We finally got onto that trick after a few invasions to Europe and I slept all last sum mer to France comfortably on three blown-up preservers. Everybody who wasn’t on guard a t the edge of our little camp, or who wasn’t standing duty at the field telephones went to bed, for in Jap country you don’t move around at night unless you have to. Going to bed was merely a figure of speech for everybody except me. I seemed to be the only one who had brought a blanket and I def initely was the only one who had nice soft life preservers to sleep on. The others slept on the ground,in their foxholes with their ponchos wrapped around them. A poncho is wind and waterproof, but it has no warmth. In fact, it seems to draw aU the warmth out of your'body and transmit it into the air. The day had been hot, but the night got mighty cold. And a very heavy dew came gradually, soaking everything. AU the others practi cally froze and got very Utile sleep. But for once to my life, I was warm as a bug. But I didn’t sleep too much. There’s always a flaw somewhere. My flaw was the mosquitoes. I’ye never been so tortured by mosqui toes as that first night on Okinawa. They were persistent, They were tenacious. And they were tfie noisi est mosquitoes I’ve ever associated with. They were so noisy that when f pulled the blanket over the side of my fape and'covered my ears tight I could still hear them. I doused my face twice with the mosquito repellant which the ma rines had issued, but it did no good whatever. It was U o’clock before 1 finally got asleep. At 9 a. m. I awakened and knew something was wrong. What Was wrong was my face. My upper Up was swollen so that I thought t had a pigeon egg under it. My nose was so swoUen the skin was stretched tight over it. And my left eye was nearly shut. Those mosquitoes really put a scare into me. Fox’ they say Oki nawa is malarial and I certainly got enough mosquito venom that night to malariaize half of California. So bright and early, 1 started’ taking atabrtoe for the .first time to my life. Okinawa Strange Invasion Beachhead Npver before had I teen aq inva sion beach like Okinawa. There wasn't a dead oy wounded men to our sector of it* Medical oomtmen were titling among th tir ifapttt of bandages and plfitma tnd. itretohert* with nothing to do* There watn’t a tingle burning ve- hiolt. Nor a tingle boat Tying wrecked on the reef or thoreltoe. : There wet hardly anybody a t all on the beach when we landed. The few. assault wqvet .ahead of us had pushed on inland* And all that vast Weller qf people and machines that make a beach hum with work were ttiti many waves behind us, The bulldozers and toe jeeps had not yet arrived. There was no ac tivity and hardly any sound. It w&s almost a t though we were toe origi nal explorers. LEGAL NOTfCI Johnnie Craft, whose place of res idence ig unknown, end cannot with reasonable diUgeee be asoertaisd, wiH reasonable diligence be assertaUk»4*wil filed her certain action against Mar in divorce by Dorothy K. Runyon, her next friend, said action being on grounds of extreme cruelty* and being docketed as case No. 23,824, be fore the Common Haas Court, Groans County, Ohio. That said cause will come on fo r hearing on or after May 6, 1945. (3-23—6t-4-27) MARCUS SHOUP, Attorney fo r Plaintiff NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Elva Dtowiddie, Deceased Notice is hereby given that F . W. Dinwiddie has been duly appointed as Executor of. the estate of Elva Din widdie, deceased* late of Bellbrook* Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 14th day of March, 1945 WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Forrest E. Trost, Deceas ed. Notice is hereby given that Marjor ie W. Trost, has been duly appointed as Administratrix of* the estate of Forrest E, Trost, deceased, late of Sugarcreek Township, Greene County Ohio. . . .. v Dated this 17th day of March, 1945 • WILLIAM B. McCALLISTERi Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. . 'lllllllllllllM tHIM HIItllM lIIIM litM tlHim illllM IM M IIUIIilHIIIIIH . 1■■* ■ 8 1 Pipe, Valves and Fittings for i ■S- • f ■ I water, gas and steam* Hand and | Electric Pumps for all purposes, | Bolts, Pulleys, V Belts, Plunsbtof § and Heating Supplies. 3 *. ‘ , I J. P, BOCKLETT | SUPPLY CO. I XENIA. OHIO X ■ ' ■ '•■IMliailMliaillllllHIIlUiaitlHIItnMIMMMmtllUIINIIIIMMMM Experienced Typists and Clerical Workers. Steady em ployment, pleasant working condi tions, good pay. McCall Corporation 2219 McCall St. Dayton; O. A NAME THAT STANDS FOR GOOD “ / F URN I TURE BUDGET PLAN . 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