The Cedarville Herald, Volume 68, Numbers 27-52
C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D —. — e d it o r a n d PUBLISHER A m * . ; OU+ H w M t t JM OD'i « U * t f Y a U w f P r w . Amp Enl*r*d a t th* Po*t Ofl&tfc* Cedarville, Ohio, October 81,1887, as second class matter. FRIDAY, JULY 2 0 ,1945 CONGRESS HAS NOT COMPLETED ITS WORK Congress as a unit is- not in session, due to th e summer re Both majority and minority have left the public uninform ed on a subject that should be written “as is" for future history Behind closed doors ever the pation the discussion goes on as to $£e condition of Franklin D. Roosevelt for weeks and months before his death. That the public was daily misinformed about his health there can be no denial. Unless Congress, acts to get the facts before,the people, the cloud will hang over5 the nation that those in authority dared permit the people know the cir- cumstances. Congress should find out if FDR did not have a stroke while in Rochester, Minn, in the late summer of 1988 at- the Mayo Clinic. Did he not have.a serious stroke late in 1943 1 Adm. Mclntire, his personal physician, often issued state ments concerning Roosevelts health. They should be investigat ed, e v e n by the American-Medical Society. I t is evident the actual condition was never made public for the purpose of de- ception tha t the inner circle of New Dealers could act in the President’s stead. Who signed legal documents? Who promot ed Elliott to a higher rank and salary? Who authorized the in crease in the salary of Harry Hopkins? These are but some of the things the public has a right to know about and it is up to Congress to make the facts known even a t this late date. UNFAIR COMPETITION , Basically, the idea of farm cooperatives is sound. Wehave never held anything but admiration for the principle that farm producers have a right to market, efficiently and economically, their own products. So long as such organizations follow sound business principles; so long as they abide by the fundamentals of free enterprise we can give them nothing but our best sup- : port. ■’ . .d ' But farm cooperatives today are not following those prin ciples. Aided by government subsidies and free—for the most parfc—*-frdm government taxation, they are taking unfair ad vantage of other industries which are competitors in the same field. . . . Our attention has been called to the milk marketing situa tion in Cincinnati. Assisted by the tax-exemption clauses of Federal legislation, noii-tax-paying cooperatives have taken over a large part of the local milk, cream and ice cream mar- ■ketl If this had been done under the American competitive sys tem we wo'uld have welcomed it. Had the cooperatives, thru good management and careful business methods, been able to build substantial profits, would have been to their credit. But when they are prosperous chiefly because they pay few taxes while their competitors are forced to contribute such levies, we feel tha t protests of individual distributing agencies are worthy of support. Cooperatives operating under the free enterprise system deserve support and praise. When they take advantage of un fair government assistance to force worthy competitors out of business, we'feel tha t it is high time to call a halt. —Cincinnati Enquirer SENSIBLE PROPOSAL ON MILITARY TRAINING •• Congressman Joseph Martin, Republican House .minority leader, comes out this week with a proposal for consideration th a t should have first place a t the Potsdam Conference, where - .plans are being laid fo r future peace as well as dividing Europe along-world political lines that leads to future war as the gen- ertions come and go just as was done under the plan used by ““Woodrow Wilsoii. You cannot mix nationalities anymore than •you can mix oil and water and make them as one. Cong. Martin suggests that a proposal be placed before the Conference urging all nations to drop compulsory military training at the’age of 18 and that this nation take the lead. That is the most sensible proposal on the subject that has come from any quarter. . . ' That this will meet with opposition we can expect and we presume he has by experience expected the plan to be opposed, First, the military brass hats, in Washington tha t think first in •terms of dollars and uniforms would oppose such a plan. Second, the great financial and manufacturing interests that reap the hundreds of millions out of war on cost plus contracts, will oppose it. Third, the Democratic New Deal will oppose it because it has popular appeal and WQUld entail the continued spending of hundreds of millions of the-income taxpayer's dol lars. . Here we are today wasting blood and money along with the most needed elements of the earth, coal, iron, oil as well- as overtaxing our productive land to try to feed the world, and yet we are in conference with other nations, not to avert a third world war by dropping all things military; but by continuing the military, thus<making it possible for another war tha t could . plunge millions into a holicaust over night. The war mongers and the Democratic New Deal politicians are the backbone of the compulsory military training program. 'Neither have had, nor now have, the interest of the nation, oth er .than from a selfish view point. We1 have taken pains "to check followers of compulsory military training from high up political ranks down to the commonest citizen, and few there are in the latter class tha t endorse the program .' In the other class few there are tha t have sons th a t would be compelled to enter military training. > The loss to the nation from a moral standpoint cannot be estimated other/ than by comparing this country with the Eu ropean countries that have had compulsory military training. Every country engaged in the European war, regardless of which side they were on, except the U. S., has had military training of youths fo r hundreds of years. It is a matter of his tory that most all our wars of the past generations Have origi nated or have been fought across the Atlantic, except when the British tried to take this young nation by force tha t led to the war of the Revolution. Are we to prepare for a military age or remain away from the military standpoint, other than what our forefathers planned, the national guard and regular army as well as the navy? ”Preparedness is a necessity for national defense but preparedness for war in peace time is an economic waste. v Compulsory military tra iling will lead to breaking down home influence that is necessary in a democracy. If you want to live under a Hitler or Mussolini, the compulsory feature is ideal—-but our Hitler is dead until another can be found. Our program for higher education would be made useless, for as the ypung man neared the eighteenth year of his life, his inter est in school or college would weaken, knowing th a t his life had been charted in a socalled democracy, just what life has been for the millions of Germans, Russians and Italians tha t He in the cold ground* the fruits of military training. Those yet alive are EXIT THE DAIRY MASTER—It might have been surprising news to * lot at newspaper readers to le srn that Mr, Henry Morganthau, the New Deal "Alexander Hamilton," playboy friend of the late FDR, has .cashed his last pay-check a t the- request of Mr. Har ry Truman, that man from Missouri, Henry had had quite a record selling American war" bonds, Henry also has quite a record when called before either branch of Congress to explain some financial setup, Henry a t no time trusted to his memory, early in his administration or with the past year, after ten years in office. When called before a congressional commit tee Henry had five trusted assistant treasurers. When asked a question the witness stand Henry would ask one of his assistants or all of them to answer for him. That was the ‘‘Alexander Hamilton" FDR placed in charge of the nations, or in charge o'l what is best known as “deficit spend ing" or keeping the books in red ink. Henry was once a famous dairy far mer. He had several hundred head, just such a herd as a rich millionaire’s son would be expected to have, He had.definite ideas about milk produc tion but somewhew the milk went sour or the red ink eclipsed the black. The dairy barn lost its pride. The doors and windows- became useless. Fences sagged here and there for the want of posts, Henry-Wad one b fthe niost remarkable dairy‘cow sales yet known to modern day^'ffairyingJ The auctioneer sold $200 -feoWs to Henry’s neighbor's for s$20 a "head and 52,000 and $5,000 animals 'fo r just a few hundred.. Henry was FDR’s idea of a public servant. Any millionaire •son that went broke never hit the cold or the snow on Washington’s streets if he" wanted to get on Uncle Sam’s payroll. No Sir! It was costly motor cars operated on governmer t gasoline with paid government chauffeurs. It was a lucky day for Hen Wallace when the New Deal paraded to the tune of “Happy Days Are Here A- gain.’’ A Gretna -aoonty race fancier,' who is in the past-been a lond.iuppo4*r of the New Deal, was asked by the writer in Xenia what be had to say about the order abolishing county fair racing, “If you want to know it is child's play and Harry Truman had batter be back in this country work ing fo r voters for those European greasers can’t help elect him.” We ventured a second question. “In your opinion what effect would the race or der have on a local option election in the county at this time?” It would go a long -way to making the county dry and it certainly will make the cbunty stronger Republican for a long time to come,” Dispatches and the radio give ’ out reports which indicate just haw fox- ey Comrade Joe Stalin is in' his moves for European control. 1Stalin would not agree to meet Churchill md Truman a t a date they wanted. All the time he was arguing with the two members of the Big-Three he had several hundred thousand of his sol diers in Berlin and other parts of the one-time German empire ripping out valuable machinery from factories, u ’.«,phones from residences and office buddings and typewriters and radios of every description. As Germany had been divided into three parts for the Big-Three control, Stalin ordered his men to confiscate all food supplies itt homes and wholesale and retail outlets'and trucked and shipped them .over the line into Russia. When the raiding was completed Stalin set the date .when Churchill and Truman might go into Potsdam for the great talkfest. Both Churchill and Truman had to cool their heels in France a- waiting the' day they might even en ter that part of Germany, England and the U. S. was to control. Stalin also has shipped several hundred thousand'German laborers into Rus sia for slave labor. You will recall that FDR at one time intimated Stal in had been converted to democracy and had dropped Communism, If the Russian took the cue from FDR he has evidently been a New Deal con vert tb New Deal de-MOCRACY. The radio tells us dairy farmers in (he'Kansas City milk-shed have gone on a strike. Kunsas City you know is in President Truman’s state. The farmers out there have ignored the CIO or some union group demands that all cows must be palled by New Deal union milkers. The milk must be hauled by New Deal truckers that belong to “Dead Uncle Dan” (FDR tribute the night of the big hilarity in a Washington hotel when two of our navy boys were • brutally beaten by two o f’’‘Dear UneTelDaii’s Tenms- -ter sluggers”) That was the night when n certain tongue wagged but the public could never tell whether it was •in need of oil or bad an over supply. In as jnueh as England and the U. S. were to feed their respective sec tions of Germany, Truman and Churchill arrived just in time when the populace was in dire need. How Truman and Churchill will keep their consciences within bounds after learn ing food was stripped from private homes will only be told at a later date. The Kansas dairy farmers say they Will 'refuse to deliver milk under the demands of the union. There has been a scarcity of milk in . the city Without a strike. The day is not far off when Greene county farmers will face the same demand as have the dairymen around Kansaso City. The only man that can save the farmer from financial distress is President Harry. Will he or can he do it? The Wage scale is going up in the course of time by New Deal action in Con gress and that means wages on the farm as well as factory. Farm prices are tied to the 1914 “panic year” lev el. The red flag of inflation is wav ed each time the farmers asks for an increase or pay for the family la- boy The AAA and a lot of New Deal bureaucratic boards, loan agencies! and commissions^ set up purposely to keep throwing sand in the farmer’s face, Remember that once famous statement—the farmers are 1 “too damn dumb to understand.” .And an other: “Every man has his price”. Both came from highup New Deal ers. May be something is cooking. A report comes out of Washington that Uncle Harry says:: the government must get out *of Lie loan business" If true a: new-perspiration will break on more than one brow.' crippled o f probably prisoners of war. Thrco llegea and tiniversiti&J of the land would be so Weakened by compulsory military training, many would have to close. The seminaries for training youth for the gospel min istry would in time become vacant. There would be less in number of young men for school teachers^ superintendents and leaders in higher education. That has been the history in Eu rope and th a t would be the same in this nation, the same nation the old world has begged us to help save, to escape starvation; but least of all old Europe endowed in military spirit does not beg for Salvation. After all we regard the recent proposal of Cong, Martin as the most sensible, the most far-reaching, the most practical—- each nation abolishing: compulsory military training to raise the moral standing of the peoples of all nations, if American lead erahip aspires to the better things in life afid h e r opportunity, ... beyond, here is Will the people arise to the occasion? A Dayton friend “drops n hint a- bout the “no racing order"’ to save gasoline. He points out that “Old Kaintuck" is now high with the ad ministration. To find n native that state that did not like any kind of racing would be like trying to find a Communist that did not like vodka. Jimmy Byrnes, from South Carolina, when one of FDR's numerous assist ant presidents, drew the blinds’on all racig because there was so much gambling and waste of electric lights (around dog tracks). The Kentucky Derby is a national event. Millions flow into the pockets of the owners of-the track and the pari mutuals, I t ! is Kentucky’s big day. Then came an, order later lifting the lid for the 1 The New Dealers set the or- j iler“Sis affective the day previous to the. races, after the crowd was in the city. Now wc have another race hol iday, The running boys have had a Short season. The harness racing gets hit in the neck, Everything has Worked out as planned. Kentucky is in the saddle at Washington. Ohio horsemen are largely of the “harness ‘ fan from Payton, a three time voter type". Sore? Are you nsklng me? You will see no Truman pictures at the county fairs this year. ’ The. New Deal has putTBellcfon- tairte behind the eight-ball. The city, owns its own electric light and water plant. Electricity is required for the city and for the water plant. It takes coal to get power. The city Uses a- bout a car load of coal each day.- So far this month only two ears of. coal have been received. Several days ago the New Dealers in Washington al lotted Bellefontaine 1000, tons of coal for’ immediate shipment. Saturday the city received word the .1000 tons. bad been diverted lon government order to St. Paul, Minn. What Bellefontaine suffers is just what is in store for thousands of homes, especially those that have not signed the quota cards. Even the quota card you have signed does not mean you will get coal when you want it pr even when you peed it Remembe.t the New Deal promise of 20 pounds of canning sugar that once rang over the nation for can ning purposed? Well that ton can be cut to 500. pounds over night. BUTTER IS TO SPOIL—Take notice red points reduced from 24 to 10 af ter Mayor Laguardia of New York, directed health authorities to check civilian supplies in the hands of deal ers.’ He found 2,300,000 pounds of butter in his bity that was becoming rancid. No fetion with OPA. Then arrived the new Secretary of Agri culture on the, job, with a club over the Roosevelt Communists in -price fixing quarter, The press was handed a stofy of fiction. The army did not*need te much butter and for that reason civilians could have more. Neither honor, honesty or integrity as requisites with the New Deal in Washington, or Ohio, The newshandlers in New. York City have defied every state, city and hational order to return to work and end their strike, Thirteen million people purchased New York daily papers in and out of the city. The strike is still on, Reports are that •fin !i our service wet# expertly ■ examined by one trained In iunsral matters, he would tbdr-i> , »A iunerat home properly ap> , V" ' pointed-' lAr\m«tftul'>6ud1 physical comlorl, »Professional ability bl ihe highest rank, >trained attendance upon the neods oi iamily and iriends, m c m i l l a n In due time nil printer organisations In the city will go out in Sympathy with the strikers. This strike is in AFL ranks and several newspapers in New Jersey and also in Birmingham, Ala., are out and no papers in these NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Florence O, Townsley, de ceased, Notice Is hereby given that Jesse C. Townsley has been duly appointed as Executor of the estate of Florence G. cities. A molder cannot complain , Townsley, deceased, late of Cedarville neither can the plumber or bartender ’ Township, Greene County, Ohio. complain if they cannot get their pa pers, This strike amuses the writer for -the great New York Times that was pro-Roosevelt, from privy build ing jto entering the war, other than on stacking the Supreme Court, is just now getting its belly full of what i t dared to comment about when a strike hit some other industry. The Times was so fearful of higher prices for farm products bringing on inflation, the writer took op the issue with the management, of course not expecting a change in editorial policy. We did get a fine letter answering our and agreeing .with some of our claims. When the news workers want more money for their labor, the Times, of course is now convinced to give it might lfead to sure inflation. That is what the strike is about".' Even the Fields “P M” scandal sheet, that has been pro- New Deal defending strikes everywhere until it hit the million aires pocketbook. Gosh* Suppose the boys on the Dayton Daily News asked for more money? Another place where the inflation bug-a-boo would be waved' as a blind. Any strike called against any newspaper that supported the New Deal must be call ed justified. All of them held their silence when “sit-downers” were de stroying automobile factory machin ery in Detroit. Them were the good old days when FDR and. John L.: Lewis were drinking icedtea through t(ie same straw, , Dated this I2th day of June, 19*5. WILLIAM B, McCALLI8TER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Margaret Mitchner, De ceased. Notice is hereby given that James J. Curlett has been duly appointed as Administrator of the estate of Mar garet Mitchner, deceased, late of Spring Valley Township, Greene County, Ohio, v Dated this 13th day of July, 1945. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio, ■ LEGAL NOTICE Mabel Lawson, whose addresB is 109 Water Street, South Norwalk, Con necticut, is hereby notified that Pfc. George F. Lawson filed his. petition against her for divorce in the Com mon Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio. Said case is numbered 23*976 on the Docket' of said court. The grounds for this action are Gross Neglect of Duty, and Extreme .Cruelty Said cause will be for hearing on or after six weeks from July 6,1945, the date of the first publication of this notice. . PfC. GEORGE F. LAWSON,. Plaintiff (7-6-6t-8-10) GEO. W. DANIELS, Atty. US 1-2 E. Main at,, Springfield, O. LEGAL NOTICE Kenneth W. Gordon, whose last place of address is 12 Minneapolis, Ave., Vincennes, Indiana, is hereby notified -that Judith D. Gordon has filed a petition in the Qommon Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, against him, the same being Case No. 23974, praying for a divorce on the ground of Extreme Cruelty and that said cause, will come on for hearing on or after six full weeks from the date of the first publication hereon. (7-G-6t-8-10) DAN M. AULTMAN, Attorney for Plaintiff MAKES .WESTERN TRIP TO ACCOMPANY DAUGHTER LEGAL NOTICE Pvt. Ropcoe Boggs, 35-237-365 whose last known place of address was Co. D. 4th Bn. A. R. T. C. Arm ed, Fort Knox, Ky., and whose pres ent place of residence is unknown for the reason that he is A.. W. O. L. from the Armed Forces of the United States, will take notice thpt on the 1st day of June, 1945, Irene M. Boggs, Yellow Springs, Ohio, filed her action for Divorce, Custody of Minor Child ren, Property Settlement and Other Relief against him in the Court of Common Pleas, Greene County Ohio, Case No. 23,922 on the docket of said Court and that said case will come on for hearing six full weeks from June 8, 1945, which is the date of the first publication hereof. . (6-8-6t-7-13,) IRENE M.. BOGGS, Plaintiff. Robert H. Wead, Attorney. * , NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Marion Francis Jones, Deceased. / Notice is hereby given that Eliza beth Underwood has been duly apoint- ed as Administratrix of the estate of Marion Francis Jones, deceased, late of Caesarcreek Township, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 18th day of May, 1945. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. * NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Carl Spohn, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that Marie Spohn has been duly appointed as Ad ministratrix of the estate of Carl Spohn, deceased late of Beavercreek Township, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 2nd day of June; 1945. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. LEGAL NOTICE Jane Scott, whose address is Har mony, Pa., will take notice that on the 10th of July, 1945, Elvert Scott filed his petition in the Court of Con^ mon Pleas, Greene County, Ohio, a-' gainst her, the same being Case No. 23,983, on the docket of* said court, praying for divorce on the grounds of Gross Neglect of Duty and Extreme Gruelty and for Other ’Relief*, and that said cause will come on for hear ing, six full weeks from July 13,1945, which is the date of the first publi cation hereof, (7-13 6t 8-17) ELVERT SCOTT, Plaintiff' ROBERT H.WEAD, . Attorney LEGAL NOTICE Mildred R, Jones, 1509, Irwin St., Washington, D. C., is hereby notified that Clifford Clarke Jones, has filed a petition in the Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio,.against her, the same being Case No. 23,987, praying for a divorce on the ground of Gross Neglect of Duty, and that said cause will come on for hearing six full weeks from-the date.of the first publi cation, which is July. 13, 1945, or as soon thereafter as the court may set said cause down for trial. (7-13 6t 8-17) CLIFFORD CLARKE JONES, Plaintiff Mr. Fred Townsley has gone to Roseville, New Mexico, to meet his ‘ HORN & ZARKA,, Attorneys, daughter and granddaughter, Mrs. Winters National Bank Bldg., Swallen. Capt. Dayton, Ohio. Swallen has been sent elsewhere and his wife and daughter will return to Cedarville and reside with her pa rents. A SPEEDY TRANSACTION In a short time you receive the full amount needed in actual cash. $20 to $500 Springfield Loan Co., 32 W. High at. Phone 3061 Springfield, Ohio WANTED! , Full time1or part time laborers, Handy men. Welders. A carpenter, Blacksmiths, first claim Machinists and helpers. • UNIVERSAL ATLAS CEMENT COMPANY, OSBORN, OHIO LEGAL NOTICE Common PleaB Court, Greene Coun ty, Ohio. William E. Cousins, Plaintiff VS. Gertrude Holmes, et ah, Defendants Gertrude Holmes and Norman Hol mes, whose last place of residence is Bienville, New Orleans, 19, La., and Qorrine Gray and James A, Gray, whose last known place of residence is 4236 Herbert Street, Detroit, Mich., will take notice that on the 23rd day of June, 1945, William E. Cousins fil ed his petition againBt them in the Common Pleas Court of Greene Coun ty, Ohio, asking for partition of real estate In the City of Xenia, Ohio, .and being 30 feet.off the east side of Lot No. Four (4) Alfred ’ Trader’s subdivision of Oult Lot No. Ten (10), and that if said real estate could not be partitioned that same may be a p - 1 prai. ed and sold according to law, and that they are requited to answer Bald petition on or before the 3 ist day of August* 1046, or Judgment may be taken by the plaintiff, ordering par tition or sale of said real estate, " WILLIAM E, COUSINS, Plaintiff. (6-8MW.3) Smith, McCaUister A Gibney, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Xenia, O, NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS ^ IN-DIVORCE Jewel F. Famer, who resides a t 074 Bussey Street, Sao Bernardino, Cal- fornia, will take notice that Floy A, Famer has filed In the Court of Com mon Pleas of Greene County, Ohio, in case No. 23,948, his petition praying that he may be divorced from her and for such orders and relief as may be just and proper in that case. The po tion states that the defendant is guilty of gross neglect of duty. Said case will be for trial on August 4, 1945, on. as soon thereafter as the Court may assign it fo r trial a t the Cjourt House In Xenia, Ohio, I f an answer is not filed by defendant by said date, judgment may be taken A- gainst her. FLOYD A. FARNER, (G-22-6t-7-29) By Morris D. Rice, his attorney, Osborn, Ohio* LEGAL NOTICE ' Pfc. Max H. Perkins, Hq. M. O, T. G.—81, Ord. Mod. 9th,° Cherry Point, North Carolina, is hereby notified that Mary M. Perkins has filed a' pe tition in tiie Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, against him,) the same being Case No. 23,965, pray ing for a divorce on the ground of Gross Neglect of Duty, and that said cause will, come on . for hearing six full weeks from the date of the first publication hereof, or as soon there after as the court may set said cause down for trial. (6-29-6t-8-3) DAN M. AULTMAN Attorney for Plaintiff-. . NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT.. Estate of Myra L. Baird, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that Donald L. Baird, Sr., has been duly appointed as Executor of the estate of -Myra L. Baird, deceased, late of Sugarcreek Township; Greene, County, Ohio. Dated this 28th day of June, 1945. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. llllltllllM IIIIIIIM IHIM IM lim iM M IHIIM IIM IIIIIIIItlllfM lllllllllin I Pipe, Valves and, Fittings for | water, gas and steam, Hand and | Electric Pumps for all purposes, I Bolts, Pulleys, V. 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