The Cedarville Herald, Volume 68, Numbers 27-52
K iau iL fi, p B & k % J P K » t , t m •#r T H E C 8 D A I V H L E H E R . A L © ~|pi"~~ j^p* _______mrrj . _____— — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER XAH m M ;|Lt| tf * Qfctf i MX f MtiWri.Y*U#jf Yr*w« A m * Entered tit the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 81,1887, as second class matter, FRIDAY, JU N E 1, 1945 WE HAVE NOT REACHED THE MILLENIUM A psri President Truman has cone a long way in calling Herbert Hoov er to the Wb«t® Home for a Conference on the food situation, both domestic and foreign. .Considering standards o f the past twelve years under the New Deal, thia might be termed political suicide, even if Mr, Hoover is credited with having experience, under a former Democratic president, in feeding Europe without scandal. All this is beside the point we wish to make. Experience was never a requisite o f the former president who kn,ew everything about everybody every where. But the Truman invitation will not lead ub to the millenium by ffftftitfng Mr, Hoover's advice. It will take more than one mind many years to repair the wreckage o f our economic system brought about by the so-called New Deal. Scarcity o f food is not the only important problem we face. * . This nation faces not only the food problem, brought about by the New Deal system o f creating a scarcity, by paying farmers not to pro duce crops as a bribe fo r votes at the polls, but how the coming gen- - erations will meet the great financial obligation we have underwritten thafnow soars to the three hundred billion mark, the estimated wealth o f the nation, including all that is owned by all classes. The nation . has been swooned to unconsciousness by the continued wavipg o f the flag o f “ inflation’, to keep, the public mind o ff of the great national debt, Between the two eyils we.can overcome inflation much easier than we can pay o ff the debt, and the former can be cured in a mat ter o f months or a few years, while the debt is to be handed down to Unborn generations. Whether the nation can or will survive, no living mortal can predict today. This nation has had socalled panics and do-' pressions since the foundation o f the republic, usually in thirty year periods and our worst financial disturbances have always followed the wars wi£ have engaged in, at home or abroad. Our greatest growth has beejn during the past 100 years, or probably fifty years. We have had inflation such as was never known following World War I. Who is there that can say we have not survived? W.*o is there that can prove, the recent depression was not. brought’ on by individuals in the mad scramble to outbid one another? The conservative leader in in dustry, in merchandising, and in farming,, knew his limitations and operated within.that bound. The fellow that was mislead, or t;be one that wanted to plunge or to speculate (not invest), was nadoubt wip ed out. After all the nation suffered due to the “ get rich” fever that spread over the country. That has been cured and would have been in time as in other years, such as followed the Civil War, without bring ing a cure all from Russia where no body is allowed to own anything. This brings us up to the third issue that the nation faces. Are we to sit back compladently and permit the growth and foster the greatest evil ever known to mankind to spread in what has been the foremost civilized people on earth? This menace is Communism, now prefaced by what is termed a socialistic state. Comrnuuism is no better or no worse that what Germany had forced on her by Hitler or Italy adopted under Mussolini, Roosevelt's idea o f state socialism. ‘ As we follow the trend o f events in Frame and other small nations in Europe we find a definite swing to open Communism, especially all states around.or near Russia.. This is the natural result o f the out come o f the war in Europe. It is the one reason, coupled with secert agreements between Roosevelt and Stalin, that the later is now only giving passive support to the San. Francisco Conference. Certainly America does not want a continuance of the New Deal for another five years o f regimentation such as Senator Wagner, New York rad ical predicts this week as a necessity. Once our people become hungry and angry they may be lead into the socialistic state and then Com munism if this Wagner predictions are true. Everything that has been regimented has brought its own black market and in the end a scarcity and the result is indisputable today. We credit President Truman with a serious and earnest dsire to get from under this mess he inherited. He must first get rid o f the pinks, the reds: and various shades o f Communists that were Intren ched in governmental office by Roosevelt, .Hopkins, Frankfurter and other lesser satilites o f the Stalin school o f govermental thought, if not his. administration will be a failure. Before this is done he may even be forced to clean out the offcolored and the one Communist on the Supreme Court. His firing o f Francis Biddle is an omen o f good intentions, just as Roosevelt’s death opened the opportunity o f keep ing this nation what it has been over the years and what is has done for out* own people—and for the peoples o f the earth, something no nation on the globe can duplicate today. . • Our misfortune today as we see it is the attitude o f the American press, .not as a whole, but small sections o f it that have become enam ored with the Russian idea o f government. These newspapers can see so much good iii a regimented people, a censored press, a closed pulpit and a 100 percent socialistic state in Russia that it would have much o f the same in this country, any yet there is not a writer o f ’ such views that would consent to live in Stalin’s country, under his regimenation, half as long as Emma Goldman did before she'appealed to the author ities in thia country to permit her return, which was granted and she died “ under a flag o f the free and the home o f the brave” . We have in mind one newspaper that one time followed the tra ditional Democratic faith but o f recent years under periods o f great prosperity, has drifted from the old moprings and has been preaching what many old-line Democrats claim is outright political heresy—New Deal Communism. How former Governor Cox can accept the doctrine as preached almost daily through the editorial columns o f his Dayton Daily News, in the face of the honors conferred on him over the years as a congressman and three-tinfe governor, baffles his political as well his husinss associates. One thing is evident the Dayton publisher could never have gained the success he has, or massed thJ fortune he has accumulated, had he tried to operate the. past fifty years as the present generation has been forced to' accept under New Deal regi mentation. — . When President Truman invited Herbert Hoover to the White House fo r a conference on the food situation, he placed the editorial page o f the News in a peculiar position for, accepting personal com ment the News has ridiculed Hoover as much and as often as thia^col- umn has Roosevelt. President Truman could have made but one worse mistake in seeking light on the topic o f the day, food at home, and that would have been to invite Senator Robert A. Taft fo r such a con ference or a meeting on anyother subject. The able Senator, has been a “ thorn in the flesh” o f the News. An invitation to the Senator would have brought the charge o f high treason against the President. n M H IlH IU H IH IIU lW W U M U l South Charleston goes New Deal on Tuesdays, We are informed every restaurant in that place was closed on Tuesday—no meat. The traveling public fa getting a belly-full o f “ New Deal” , not meat. Three o f the knights o f the road headed into town Tuesday as full o f speeches as a Now Deal congressional candidate. It is‘ unfor tunate that the innocent must pay for the folly of Roosevelt, Wallace, and the Communistic clique that would feed all the world at our ekpense m food as well as money. I t is to be re gretted that Hopkins, Davis and a lot o f their iik were not banished to an island several yearo ago and made to listen to speeches by Joe Ball, Burton o f Cleveland, who has more interest in the Public Square soap box orators and their following than the farmers of Ohio. Both, should be forced to deliver weekly speeches to the reds o f New Deal stripe. It would be interesting reading if there was a public printed statement of how the income taxpayer's money has been spent out at San Francisco, where peace terms, world politics and a lot of other topics, especially how much longer and for how much can we (European nations) pull Uncle Sam’s leg? Congress under orders of Roosevelt voted $100,000 to start, the show that was to lead to his elec tion o f president of the world and ruler o f the planets.. Then we cannot have entertainment without plenty o f booze. San Francisco kicked in a cool $50,000 for high balls, cocktails and a full line o f world drinks to keep the loreigners in good humor, if they did not know what was going oh. Then came a call for more money, the liquor' was running low and San Franr s- jians were appealed too to show more hospitality. Senator Vanderberg, a cetotaler must feel somewhat out o f place in that crowd. Stalin sent a big shipment of Russian food and vodka to keep his delegation from getting homesick. No wonder the program, did not provide for opening a cere mony for peace with so much liquor, After all we read there were some 800 reporters there’ from all parts of the United States and as we know them -a: as a class they are all human. Some do and some don’t,.maybe the former aided in creating the drought. What we started out to ask hobr much has it cost Uncle Sam to get up the big party to date? At the Yalta Confer ence Stalin threw one” o f his famous twenty-one vodka cocktail parties that lasted six or eight hours until the dawn. One American was buried at sea and another died after reach ing the shores of his native land. To listen to 21 vodka toasts in a single night certainly requires the best vod ka to keep from worrying' over the toasts. Who is it that is profiting from our boys abroad by the manner in which they are paid o ff? Some time ago we saw a letter, written by a Cedar ville boy complaining how the boys were being gouged in the exchange in France. Normally a franc is worth about 25c in our money. Uncle Sam’s dollar is not good enough for our boys so some one in Washington devised a plan o f paying o ff the soldiers in francs,’ French money that is worth but one-fifth o f our money or about five cents. In short our boys get $50 a month but in francs that are worth only .$10 in American money. Our boys are made the goat and who has forced such a plan? Who profits in a scheme to pay with foreign money? Commentator Fulton Lewis, Jr., ex posed the plan several months ago. It’s just a New Depl crack-pot idea which Mr. Truman had better turn his .guns on, Charles M. Dean, Washington cor respondent for the Cincinnati Enquir er, has the following to say about two Ohio Browns, neither related to the other, other than in a political way, as bon are Republicans: One o f the incidents the Ohio Cong- gressman (C. J. B.) aften talks about concerned John Brown, former Ohio Director o f Agriculture, who is no re lation to the Congressman. Brown is manager o f several Ohio farms. . He had a veal calf ready to provide meat for these meals^ but the calfs life Was stayed by an interprets tion o f an OPA order. A butcher summoned to kill the calf said he could not do the job and it should be taken many miles away to Columbus to be inspected be fore he could put the meat in a deep freeze locker. Brown did not have the necessary gasoline or tires and his farm hands were hungry. Cong. B. put the matter up to OPA and finally obtained a different interpretation o f the order concerning meat in deep freeze locker. John Brown’s calf went to slaughterer and the farm hands dined. Ing fed millions o f hoad o f livestock, not pound* or tons o f meat. Predic tions were made then t u t they would face a scarcity o f food. However the New Deal liars kept the picture the brightest and the farmer went his way, little worrying over the food program. This newspaper pointed out that the farmer eats first, long before his crops reach the urban con sumer. He is eating now, He haa his meat, his dairy products, his flour, and canned fruits and vegetables. The city brethren are burning up shoe leather nowadays trying to find this same kind o f food. The New Deal press has little or nothing to say in Behalf o f the urban class, it too was lured in looking forward to receiving manna from the Washington heaven. That place is closed and is to be open ed under new management. • MANY THANKS DILLON FAMILY FIRST IN SBLMA PUBLIC SCHOOLS Mr, and Mrs. Clovis Dillon have three daughters in the Selma High School, Gwenda is president o f the freshman class. Norma president of the junior class. Bonnie president of the seniors. To complete the family circle in the school “ Father” Dillon is president o f the Selma School Board o f Education. Buying A Home? WE HAVE MONEY TO LOAN „ FOR BUYING HOMES, P ARMS AND REFINANCING COME IN AND TELL US YOUR NEEDS ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED UP TO $5,000 Peoples Building & Savings Company Xsmia, Ohio i t St* Phono 11 A lot o f city folks now realize what was claimed months ago when the New Dealers were cuffing the farmer right and left over the farm program. In those days the city people were be- POULTRY We pay highest priefes for rab bits, ducks, turkeys, fries, hens, and roosters, G1NIVAN POULTRY PLANT XENIA, OHIO W A ITED ! I POULTRY and RABBITS AM Kinds-Any Amount Top Market Paid THE CHICKEN HOUSE 301 Cincinnati Avs* abate, O, PHONE—Main 411 fine Mr. Karlh Bull, Editor and Publisher, The Cedarville Herald, Cedarville, Ohio. Dear Mr. Bull: Congratulations to you on the editorials o f May 18. It ib certainly high time that this nation gets down to a sensible, prac tical operation o f its affairs. Your editorials surely point to that funda mental. Yours sincerely, K. C. LONG Mr. Long is vice President atfd As sociate General Manager o f the Day' ton Power and Light Company. MOIiTON GRINNELL, DEAD The funerl service fo r Morton Grin- nell, 78, 'farmer and miller, will be held this Friday afternoon at 2:30 at the family home on-Grinnell road. The deceased was born where he died and operated a mill established by his father, the millstones being shipped) from France. Survivors are two brothers, Wil liam of Calif., Ernest} Wyoming; Cor nelia, ad Mrs. Marjorie Caupp, Yellow Springs; Malcolm, Osborn; Ralph o f Springfield; Harold and Cornelius of Yellow Springs, and four grandchild ren. His wife died two years ago. HAVE YOUR Clothes COATS D R E S S E S CLEANED- PRESSED Clean Them All Before You Put Them In The Closet HOURS—Daily 3:00 P. M. to 8 P. M Saturday 8:00 A. M, to 10:30.P. M. THE C L E A N E R S Quality Work South Main st., Cedarville flimtrnllnil IJuiiiilv .OUR SERVICE and niwchan*' dise must always measure up to' the high standard* with which our name is publicly ’associated. ‘ 'THE QUALITY of every »*rv‘( lea we direct is controlled by, (*ur professional knowledge Uand experienced business Vjudgment. ^ I OUR WIDE RANGE oi prices’ enables every family io_eoni! trol the expense^ i M c M i l l a n C O Z Y • THEATRE * Fri, «nd Sat-, June 1-2 * Double Feature Program * “ The Mark o f the Whistler” —AND— “ Cowboy From Lonesome River” Sun. and Mon., June 3-4 ltita Hayworth —•Lee Bowman "TONIGHT AND EVERY NIGHT” Photographed in Technicolor ALSO NEWS AND CARTOON Wed. end Thurs.j June 6-7 Ray Mtlland— Barbara Britton “TILL WE MEET AGAIN” Also News— Travel— Cartoon eWwWMiitmuiiwMeewMiMawiwwniwwwwwiM'OHwiiiwm GEORGE GORDON RELEASED We have received information from the authorities at Camp Atterbury, Ind., that Cpl. George. Gordon, has been released from the Army under the 40-year-old age role. He is>ex- pected home in a few days. The only other Greene county man in the list released was S. Sgt. May- lard D. Shaw, R 2, Jamestown. Money to loan at 5 per cent for pur- :hase o f farms or homes. Cedarville Federal Savinga & Loan Association. WOMAN’S CLUB JUNE 7th The Woman’s Club meeting has been set for Thursday, June 7 at the home o f Mrs. Phillip Frey,' moving .he date one week earlier. ’ For fa ]*—Ysily Cabbage and tomato plants. Charles Foster, R. Main st. For Sale—8 tube battery, All in good tion. Phone 6-2128. radio with new working condi- For Sale—Two-piece upholstered Living Room Suite, Condition fair. Phone, 6-1982. Lost—Pocketbook with 3 No. 3 ra tion hooks and '-3 No. 4 ration books ; in center o f town, May 16. Finder in- j form Mrs. Jessie Brightman, Cedar- ] Ville, O. (3W8) *»- PROBATE COURT GREENE COUNTY, OHIO NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Anna Ellen Compton, Deceased. • Notice is hereby given that Mari anna Bogan has been duly appointed as Administratrix o f the estate of Anna Ellen Compton, deceased, late o f Spring Valley ’’■'Township, Greene County. Dated this 18th day o f May, 1945. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, -Ohio; NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f John- G. Turner, Deceas ed, Notice is hereby given that Mal colm Turner has been.duly Appointed as Executor o f the estate of John G« Turner, deceased, late o f Cedarville Township, Greene Connty, Ohio, Dated this 17th day o f May, JM6. | WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, ; Judge o f the Probate Court, Grpon# County, Ohio. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Robert E. Forgarty, De mised. Notice is hereby given .that Imobel Fogarty has been duly appointed as Executrix o f the estate o f Robert E, Fogarty, deceased, late o f Beaver creek Township, Greene County, Ohio, Dated this 2nd day o f May, 1945. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene^ County, Ohio. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Marion Francis Jones, Deceased. Notice is hereby'•given that Eliza beth Underwood has been duly apoint- ed as Administratrix o f the estate of Marion Francis Jones, deceased, late o f Caeaercreek Township, Greene Dated this 18th day o f May, 1945. WILLIAhj B. McCALLISTER, Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. Accounts and Vouchers in the follow ing named persons and estates have been filed in the Probate Court _ o f Greene County, Ohio, for inspection, settlement and record and_unless there __ _________ is a motion filed for hearing same on or before the 2nd day o f July, 1945, County* Vh,°* the same will be ordered recorded. Bertha Cunningham, Executrix, Eliza A. L. Ayers, deceased. . . Walter Biersack,1 Admr. Antori Biersack, Jr., deceased. ; William Culver Dawson, Executor Walter N. Dawson, deceased. . Zettie Deck, Administrator, Casper Deck, deceased. ’ ' Connorum S. Dillon, Executor, Min nie E. Dillon, deceased. J. M. Hollingsworth, Admr. Sarah E. Hollingsworth, deceased. William S. Rogers,. Admr. Sarah E . . Jackson, deceased. j William S. Rogers, Admr. Luoretia Jones, deceased. I J. A. Koogler, Admr. Phillip Sheri- dan Koogler, deceased^ j William S. Rogers, Admr. Hiram J. Long, deceased. Margaret E. Prugh, Executrix Margaret E. Prugh, deceased. Enid D. Smith,* Executrix, Percy Almerin Smith, deceased. William S. Rogers, Administrator, Anrta Thomas, deceased. First,>FinaI and Distributive Accounts Mary M. Carnes, Executrix, Emma M. Carnes, deceased, I . Frank Kendig, Administrator, John P. Kendig, deceased. I "S. N. McClellan, Administrator. D. B. N. H. R. McClellan, deceased. Patrick McNeills, Administrator,’ Mary McNellis, deceased, i Mabel E. Welch, Administratrix, Harry L. Davisson, deceased. ; Affidavit in Lieu o f and. for an Ac count The Fifth-Third Union Trust Com pany, Trustee, R. S. Kingsbury, de ceased, Seventh Account. i William A. Miller. Guardian, Jo seph J. Nash, Incompetent, Fourth ana final Account. ’ : Pearl S. Smith, Guardian, Lloyd Garrison Smitji, Affidavit in Lieu o f and for an Account. James H. Wilson, Administrator, James Henry Wilson, Sr., deceased, Statement in Lieu o f and for an Ac count. : June 1, 1945. Public Auction Xenia Theater Friday—Satu rday Twin Thrill Days! SCREEN "Eve Knew Her A p p l e s " With * Ann Miller and WilliamWright Stitt., Mon., Tue. LAND AND CHATTELS The farm and chattels of the late J.ohir G. Turner will be offered at public auction free of appraisement on SATURDAY, JUNE 2,1945 ■” **» at the late residence on the Townsley Road, 1 mile south of U. S. Route No. 42, 6 mile East of Cedarville, 6 mile West of South Charleston, and 1 1-2 miles WeBt of Selma, Ohio, beginning at 12 o’clock noon (real estate sells at 2 o’clock F. M.) HOUSEHOLD GOODS------- Living room suite, 3 bedroom suites, rugs, odd chairs, sew ing machine, 2 cedar chests, and miscellaneous items too nu merous to mention. LIVESTOCK— 3 milk cows, 2 calves, 18 head of feeder hbgs, 8 brood sows (with pigs), 5 brood sows (farrow in June), 1 reg. Poland China Boar, about 60 sheep with reg. Shropshire Buck, 2 horses etc. MACHINERY— 2 wagons, manure spreader, 3 hog feeders, 3 hog fountains hog box, plow, mower (new), com planter (new), com sheller, double disc, cart, sheep racks, miscellaneous hand tools. 45 BALES OF HAY .TERMS-*- Cash (for.all chattel*). Promptly at 2 P. M. th« following real ottate will be offer ed separately in two parcels and then as a whole t PARCEL NO 1— 103.25 acres, in Cedarvlllfe Township, Greene Bounty, Ohio; complete set buildings; 32x60 bank bam , with cattle shed and silo attached, double crib, etc., 9 room house with furnace and bsth, natural gas and electricity install ed; 4 room tenant house, about 10 acres in woods, orchard and bam lot with more than 90 acres under cultivation, 2 acres growing wheat and as much com as is planted by sale time goes with the farm ; tile drained; 3 weels; good fences, . PARCELNO.2— 57.88 Acre in Cedarville Township’, Greene County,. Ohio, 7 room house with gas and electricity, 82x40 bank barn, corn crib and chicken house, 50 acres under cultivation, 18 acres growing wheat and as much corn as is p la n t-: ed by sale time goes with the farm ; tile drained; 2 wells; good fences. <» TERMS—10% deposit With hid; Ulasee on delivery of desd end possesion, Sale (s being hod to settle the EstetO of John G. Turner, deceased. Sale conducted by Elder A Grassland, Clerks • Howard Titus, Auctioneer ■For Information see MILLER A FINNEY, Attys, MALCOLM TURNER, Xsnls, Ohio Telephone: 2846-- Booth Charleston, 0 , NOTCE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f George M; Black, Deceased. , Notice in hereby given that Daniel Schuyler has been duly appointed as Administrator^ o f the estate o f George M. Black, deceased, late o f . Spring Valley, Greene County, Ohio, Dated this 24th day o f April, 1946. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. - * LEGAL NOTICE Lillian Terrell is hereby notified that John F. Terrell has filed a peti tion in the Common Pleas 'Court, Greene County, praying for a divorce on the grou’nds of Gross Neglect of. Duty and Extreme Cruelty, the same being Case No. 23,898, and that said’ cause will come on for hearing on or after six full weblcs from the date o f the first publication hereof, and if said defendant has not pleaded by. that time, judgment may be taken a- gainst her. (5-18-01-22) DAN M. AULTMAN, Attorney for Plaintiff 1 Pipe, Valves and Fittings for | | water, gas and steam, Hand and | | Electric Pumps for all purposes, | f Bolts. Pulleys, V Belts, Plumbing | I and Heating Supplies. J J. P. BOCKLETT SUPPLY CO. XENIA, OHIO. | A NAME THAT STANDS ‘ FOR GOOD IFURNITU RE i BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE Adair's N. Detroit St. Xenia, O. ---- rt---—r—r—mr-irnTiiiinmniHt—n HiiiiiiMiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiMiiiiimiiMiiiiiiiiiiimniiiMi I FARMS FOR SALE AND s i , . X i FARM LOANS | We have many good farms fo r sale | on easy terms. Also make farm | loans at 4 % interest for 15 years. No application fee and no apprais al fee. Write or Inquire McSavaney &’ Co. London O. I Leon H. Kling, Mgr. ■W QUICK SERVICE FOR DEADSTOCK XENIA FERTILIZER PHONE M*A. 454 Reverse Charg E . G. Buchsieb, Xenia, Ohio 9 Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted, „ * Reasonable Charges, Dr.C.E.Wilkfa Optotnatrto Eye Specialist Xenia. Ohio .............................1 ■■ | TmrmniHiftmm «. * . . A
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