The Cedarville Herald, Volume 69, Numbers 1-26

«HMN C K D A K . V I L L X H X k A L D mm wawhm m ras, WMTOR AND PUBLU&HKX 1MUmt y^H/W TtMH AM „ Ctatofaww, i$«, «# m Fretatfiee t i c§- #p*ri 0 *, OW*aader the Art rf I M » » . —*y ,*M R .12 ,»48 *31 •C* iDMiHmtmimum>nmninimH««»iniiimnf t>£ at farmer in that Iminmhlp that bad become disgusted with the N«rw Dealers fightiag “farm rests” that h* urged hi* son, a returned veteran ;to lode up a job in some factory »fcew >ha eeuld make »ora money than on th* farm, Th* father summed up the licking fam e ra Hold Back Farm Productsj WASHINGTON, D. C.—An old bar , aitoatlon that both oould not g a t what room alogan: "Don’t shoot the piano was dae them on the farm and for IgJayer, He’s doing the bast ha can.’* Fifty fh* Ppor Hungry Hogs A Slds Uno The PDH atawp ed* lectfsm TihMd by tho appraisers of the as> tat* a t ISO,OOP w an sold last weak fo r $210- 875, NumiMNM shaats o f stamp* from the geremmant Bureau r f Etagraving ware given to the President—free. Easy money! Farmers that want to .rislsiss ^of New Dealers shook! tom over their surplus wheat and let the hogs “root fo r themselves” All the Imngnr people are not in Europe. The New Deal feed* its gang first. Who knows what the food costs? State Auditor Fergu­ son is changed with op­ erating & “trackless truck” buetaeav.i* tak­ ing orders fo r surplus war goods for proepec- tive purchasers. The name of a Springfield Democratic CIQ leader is also mentioned as an associate. N. Dealers! CRIME IS A COSTLY BUSINESS Crime ie a costly business either in money or in human life Greene countly is called upon to foot some, expensive criminal trials and Mir, Taxpayer will put up the money ad usual. There will be trials of the Cincinnati youths, one of which hilled a deputy sheriff and injured another. One • youth has already cost the. county more than $1,000 in hospital and guard bills and then will come the costs of the trials. Both will want legal aid under the poverty statute'and this will add more to the taxpayer's burden. This week the county is staging another murder trial, when the proprietor of a.heer parlor faces charges of second degree murder fo r the .shooting of an innocent girl and the death of a man four days later. Grand jury costs and the cost of the trial must b e la id by the county while society must stand the humili­ ation attendent to such events—all due to the liquor traffic. It only comes home to the public with such events tha t crime not only takes,human lives but proves a burden-to those who must pay in taxes for the support of th a t government. ' * BIBLE FUND FOR THE JAPANESE . The American Bible Society has undertaken a worthy cause, which this organisation can always be counted upon to support, in raising a fund of $600,000 to purcha&two and one half niil- lion New Testaments; printed in Japanese, to be shipped to Ja ­ pan a t once. There are many Christian Japs all the result of years of missionary work of the Protestant denominations and in this group are the Jap leaders of today tha t backed Gen, MacAr- thur in his campaign to put th a t government on a different ba­ sis*patterned after our own as laid down by Washington and Jefferson. The Jap aristocrats that have held sway by military power for centuries are being dethroned. Just this Week' the people of Japan had the chance to vote At a popular election for the first time in a hundred years. The world will owe much to General MacArthur and as the years pass the Christian mission ary will find the work safer and much easier. , The American Bible Society has headquarters in Tokyo in a building built some years ago from funds granted by the Rus- -sell Sage Foundation. The MacArthur plan is to educate the . young Jap in the American way of.life and also give him all the , chance possible for religious training. Already the Communists have entered the field preaching a doctrine as hellish as th a t o:' Tojo. MacArthur knows tha t education will do more to avert future wars than military might, treaties, peace conferences or world'politics. In a few years Japan will be a republic headec by those who believe in and practice the Christian religion. Dayton e&y government has a prob- :*m ojnjfts hand* with city employees frorhipoKo*, firemen and garbage col-* ectpra demanding more money. The city oemmimkm la troubled as to how to raise the money. Having built up government th a t would accomodate city of three times the size of Day- ton, some way. must be found to sup­ port it or get back in its class. I t is now proposed to adopt a city income tax or a payroll tax on each and ev­ ery employee in the city, no matter, how or where employed. This has s e t the CIO in motion and a throat of referendum has has been made if the city adopt* any plan to tax em­ ployees. Tax limitations block ad­ ding more to tea l estate. To tax in­ dustry’alone on pay rolhTnhgh.t drive industry out of town and certainly would (keep new industry out. Prop­ erty owners are now refusing to rent to most classes under OPA rules. The property owner has been made the goat under the New Deal. In fact the city has been an experimental New Deal laboratory the past few years. I t has been^a haven for the Roosevelt, Wallace «nd Communistic spenders. The' conservative ClafertjfCitizensrthat have made Dayton in,,, the. past, have long been' relegated to the rear. The press of the city became 100 percent New Dealish on spending. Dayton is but one of the brand o f . Ohio cities that begge dand. tried to bluff "their way into the sales tax funds a t the expense of smaller cities, towns and townships as well as the schools. Lit­ tle sympathy; will be extended while the Roosevelt CIO only tightens the -Jrope a bit tighter around the throat of the city officials. tha t reason urged the boy to take a big paying job ip an plant that made automobile part*. The *on bad pre­ viously been a welder previous to the war. He has his old job back a t $75 a weak, or $300 a month. “Dad” says be and “Ma” can make their living this summer doing little or, nothing. He has sold five dairy cows and will milk hut one. He- will turn over his corn ground to a neighbor on the hal­ ves, A hundred chicks will take the place of yiX) marketed last year and attention will be given to a few fruit trees to get their own fru it. The son ,vill harvest $300 a month* says this irate'farmer and eat a t home and put his money! in the bank awaiting for the time when an administration is willing to recognise farm costs. The New Dealers are doing more to starve htme folks than anything we can mention. . RULE OR BE RULED Whether the people are to rule themselves or continue to be ruled by one man controled burocracy will be determined by —thfr4946-ele&tionev -The-people-have-^tad--litt4e—^voice-farthefr u cra t up in eievelendTmd-that-] government since congress abdicated to President Roosevelt in 1933. They have had less since 1941. The administration now engaged in an attempt to convert war time dictatorial pow­ ers into peace time burocratic government! Do we want to rule or be ruled? The worst epidemic of strikes in the nation's history was precipated by'unwise utterances and acts of President Truman .The people had no opportunity, thru their representatives in congress, to prevent his disasterous and costly mistakes. One man rule has committed the nation to foreign obliga­ tions, mostly yet unknown to the people. They will require,, the President says, a, conscripted army of 2,000,000 and' 10 per cen ; t>f our income. These commitments were not offered to the senate .for approval or even discussion. One man rule. * Only the election of a Republican congress next Novem .ber.can qhange the present intolerable situation. . „ *7 ' ... —- Peoria, 111., Star THE END OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS The League of Nations was given a legal burial over a t Geneva this week. The burial terminated a fanciful dream of twenty-five years ago. The League became an Issue in the pres­ idential campaign when Warren G. Harding defeated James M. Cox, the Democratic nominee. The Democrats in th a t cam paign defended the Woodrow Wilson dream while the Republi­ cans pointed out where it could not and never would do what was claimed for it among the European countries. The reviews we read in the Democratic press this week showing where the league was weak Wore in the main just what Mr. Harding had advocated in his campaign and which he proposed to cure in the World Court. Events in the recent war standi in bold relief tha t neither the League or World Court would have staved off the. Second World War. Once again we are hearing from the old and new world of another peace plan, proposed with loans of Uncle Sam's money as the lure and food fo r those who are not and never have provided for themselves. One day last week the wireless photo showed our own Jimmy Burns drinking a ‘toast with a foreign diplomat over the Russian-lran settlement. Three days later-the Russians repudiated the "settlement" The New Dealers are strong fob their liquor a t all peace conferences Where the first accomodation set up is a "ba r”. Today we are face to face with a plan to use our eighteen-year-old boys as a world police force and wa do not have to go further than review the Truman Chicago speech Army day. As the Ohio State Journal points out the United Nations is not much more than something in name, I f so why does Mr. Truman and his brass hats demand an army of two million of our youth of school age? Moreover Mr. Truman asked Con to extend the war jjwwer act which was done "owing to the is own words a t Chicago are but proof uropean situation.” .................„ ........... .............. th a t he has little faith in the UN as a futurS aJSftcy for p e ite . Mr, Stalin, much like Mr, Lewis, makes his own. decisions add he is willing to fight to defend them. Mr, Truman is enamored with Mr. Churchill's idea of world control ju s t as Mr, Wilson fell for Lord George twenty-five years ago. America will fur­ nish moet of the millions to erect a "World Capitol” here or on distant shores just as we did a t Geneva. This collosal set of or­ nate buildings are now empty and probably will rot and pass out of history. When the individual or any delegated group sets out to ta lk about world peace to eliminate war or sets up a mythical super world government to enforce peace, there must be more behind it than fancy appeal* a hundred vodka cocktails or gallons of bourbon. There can be no peace until their is eternal peace not bapti. eu with liquor. The, Hand thatrodk- l d the Pacific last week is the only guide to the everlasting f im m * needetk ge t the military for a guard. .............. A Cleveland salesman called the writer several days ago on a business matter. At the close he wanted to know if"we had any butter down here and if he could get. some? We ans­ wered in the affirmative and that we also had pledty ofgood steak also. It was a delight to “twit” the friend for he has been. oi\ the New Deal side of die fence until lately. .. Recalling our friendly discussions of matters polit­ ical he readily admitted never.again, would-be vote for the Democratic par­ ty candidate for president as long as it was ruled, by the CIO Communists, lie even termed Presidht Truman .a “round peg in e-square hole” and that was quite of admission, of a change a t heart. Any man. that admit* he had not had butter on his family table for three months, and only oloo now and then, iBentitled to butter just as much as the European. We called on a gqod Republican farm house-wife and told her of the plight of a “reformed Dem- wanted five pound of good butter no matter what the price tfas and the shipment went by mail from Spring- field. • If Ohio has a state fair this year it will take an army of men and a bank of money to put the grounds aud building in condition. In fact most of those who have visited the grounds leave with the belief it would be bet­ ter and cheaper to have no fair this fall and purchase a new site and erect new buildings. Ohioians cannot con­ ceive the damage the. army has done to buildings and grounds. For instance there is about two feet of cynders on the inclosure of the race track that a t one time was a pleasant scene with a velt lawn and attractive flower beds. The race trapk has been all but'de- stroyed and fences ripped out, Host every citizen that has ever attended the fair can recall the coliseup and the seat arrangement. The seats had been set in cement and the army used tractors to rip the seats from the con­ crete destroying.nine out ten of them instead of taking them up by hand. Other buildings, such as the cattle and hog barns suffered great damage also, The fair grounds resemble the destruction by a tornado. Paint is acking and sewers and sanitary lines damaged beyond repair. Irf fact it appears the army tried to wreck the whole institution purposely to make future fairs there an impossibly. But the frorst is that Ohio has received ■not one penny for rental or repairs, Roosevelt paid Indiana a big rental and erected a new permenant building a t the expense of the government.. In' Ohio the state was asked to be patriot­ ic,, and donate the fair grounds or the government would condemn the site. Ohio should have a new and larger site and sell the present site which is now surrounded by Columbus residen­ ces. Mercury Dropped To 28 With Frost andFreeze NEWARK — Approximately 800 . Uclongeounty farmers have set Hay J aa th* deadline for abolishment of j he Office of Price Administration or they will withhold their prodaoe from market. They voted their strike a t a meet­ ing a t Hebron last night, declaring the OPA is a husesrriage" a t justice and through its mismanagement has created soareity instead of plenty,” Their resolution also asserted “since he politician is determined to give his county cheap food a t the expends of the American farmer, we demand its (OPA) abolishment. Clark Rader of Newark, vice chair­ man of the Ohio Marketing Protest association, said the farmers would continue 100 per cent crop planting hut would not send their produce to market. He said plana I r e being made to uild cribs and sheds for the storage j £ the crops. Henry’H. Fsckler of Plymouth, the chairman of the protect association said the present price control was a five year Russian plan,” asserting that the OPA describes sale of beef cattle a t above ceiling prices black market.” He added: / “We have always aimed to sell our produce and livestock a t a little high- Now that higher prices for organiz­ ed labor only “bulge the line” all are nterested in what hair cuts and the barbershop shaves ate to cost. Chicago will ask $1.60 for haircuts and 76c :hr shaves. Columbus barbers wilt brioe their labor'a bit less than Chi­ cago, $1 for hair cuts and 60c for shares. The Chicago barbers ask a flat fte of $45 for a 46 hour week and 60 per cent commission on all business over $66, Tis will net the barbers about" $10C! per week in ti n t class •hops. Why would any man take up the law or even the ministry when we Dad such wages in exiataaeef A drop in the mercury to 32 degrees on Tuesday and Wednesday mornings with a light frost may have done some damage to fruit, especially peaches ‘ana cherries. I t is early yet to de­ termine the exact damage. A skim of ice was reported each morning on the jvater exposed in small vessels, Manager Miller of the Nagley Or­ chards burned straw all night Tuesday to protect the peach trees. Reports at different parts of Eastern Ohio say the freeze did much damage to .fru it April Conservation Month In Ohio April is Conservation month in Ohio and Conservation week in Ohio .city and Rural Schools is April 22 to 26. (Jnder-a proclamation of Gov. Lausche Arbcr and Bird Day is April 26. Con servation of the soil, .water, forests and wild life are four things Ohioians .hould know more about. ORDER NOW—-Your brooder house if metal construction. Place your order for metal grain bins to have hem in time for harvest. Immediate ‘elivery. King Tractor Bales, 986 J91N. Detroit St., Xenia, Ohio, Phone, 692. Fill up with th at good,Gulf Gas and Oil, it-takes you farther and makes your car run amoothcr. Cummings Chevrolet Sales Drive Into Springfield And See A Fine Movie U C H I L * •tarts •unsay tmeliie Bremer Pred Astaire prank Mergsn In “VOLANDA AND TH* THIIF” —-aloe— “BCD BIVtA VAL.LKY* Easter Is Coming LBGAL NOTtCN APRI L2 1 Get Your Sulta-Drewe* —Hate In this week so you can have them back lo r the ' ■- ' ■O' . Faster Event as cr price. M 700 CHICKS FOUR.-.WEEKS OLD LOST IN BROODER HOUSE FIRE The Acton poultry hatchery, a t Yel­ low Springs, suffered a loes of 700 four-week-old chicks when two brood­ e r houses burned last week. The .fire started from a brooder stove. Robert Acton, jr. is the .owner. jiEGAL NOTICE Emma Odale Smallwood, whose ad­ dress is 218 Pear street, LaCrosse, Wisconson, is hereby notified that Ernest L. Smallwood, has filed a pe­ tition in the Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, against her, the same being Case No. 24373, praying, for a divorce on the grounds of gross neglect of duty, and that said cause will come on for bearing on or after the 24th of May, 1946,' or six full weeks from the date of the first pub­ lication hereof. (4-12-6t-5-19) -MILLER k FINNEY, Attorneys for Plaintiff NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Ella Mann, Deceased, Notice.is hereby given that .John V. Gibney has been duly appointed as Administrator of the estate of" Ella Mann deceased, late of Spring Valley Township, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 2nd day of April, 1946. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. — NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT----- Estate of Elizabeth Myers, Deceased Notice is hereby riven that Joseph L. Myers has been duly appointed aa Executor of the estate' of Elizabeth Myers, deceased, late of Bellbrook Village, Greene County, Ohio, Dated this 30th day of March, 1946 . WILLIAM B, BcCALLISTERr Judge o f‘the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. THE C L EANE R S Quality Work South Main at* Cedarville Open Hours— 9 A. M. to 6 f , M. Saturday hoyrs 8 A. M. to 10 P. M, LEGAL NOTICE James Lewis,"whose last known place o f residence was unknown and cannot be ascertained, will take notice that on the 27th day of March, 1946, Daisy Lewis, filed her certain petition a gainst him in Common Pleas Conrt of Greene County, Ohio, said case being No. 24,366, on the docket of aid court will come on for hearing on or after May. 11, 1946 (8-29-6t-.6.3) MARCUS SHOUP, ■; Attorney for Plaintiti Lucile Pemberton D rite * M m i< .ant, who**’Is r t knew* 'p la it a t a4* dress was 10 Stwndert Conrt, R tttk Creak, Michigan, and whose Present whereabouts is unknown and rennet with reasonable diligeee* he »pe*r- tained will take notice that Jhta Pemberton Truesdale, the phdnfiff herein, has filed a petition in the Common Plea* Court, Gretna Gremty, Ohio, the same being Css* No. <8541, in aiaid court for the petition of oer- tain realestate situated in the County of Greene, State o f Ohio and Village of Cedarville, to wit; Being part of Military Survey en­ tered in the name of William Tomp­ kins, No. 8745, and bounded and de­ scribed as follows; Being all of lot number thirty-four (34) In G. W. Dunlap’s Addition to the Yillage of Cedarville,' Greene County, Ohio, be­ ing, the same premises conveyed to Thomas W. Spencer by ^Thomas M. .Harris and wife by deed dated March 30,1913 and recorded in Vol, 96, page 278 deed records of Greene County, Ohio, and last recorded' 11-74910 in Records of Deeds Vol. 123 page 289, Greene County, Ohio. * * ' ' The prayer of grid petition is for the partition of said real' estate. Said defendant is required to ans­ wer said petition on- the 3rd day of May, 1946, or judgment may be taken against her,* d a n a u l t m a n , Attorney for Plaintiff LEGAL NOTICE Norman Needles, whose last known place of address is Frederick Hotel, East Main Street, Spokane, Washing­ ton,’ will take notice that on the 1st day.of March, 1946, Margaret Needles filed her petition in the Greene Coun­ ty Ohio Court of Common Pleas a- gainst him, the same being Case No. 24320 on the docket of "said , court, praying for Divorce, Custody of Min­ or Child, Household Goods and Prop­ erty Settlement, Support and Main­ tenance of Minor Child, Expenses, In­ junction and "Other Relief on the grounds of gross neglect of duty and of extreme cruelty, and tha t said cause will come .for hearing., six full weeks from. March 16, 1946, which is the date of the first publication hereof. . - ROBERT H. -WEAD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Virginia Collins Plaintiff. t 'i'i LEGAL NOTICE P H O N E 6 Holland Edward Stark, whose last known place of residence was Box 826, Riverton, Wyoming, will take no-- tice that on the 27th day of March, 1946, Vera R. Stark filed her petition against him in Common Pleas Court o f Greene County, Ohio, for divorce on-the-grounds-ofTgross-neglect-ant extreme cruelty, and that unless the said Holland Edward Stark shall an­ swer said petition on "or before the 17th day of Hay, 1946, judgment may be taken granting plaintiff a divorce, the same being case No. 24,354 on the docket of the Common Pleas Court of Greene County, Ohio, ‘ (8-29-6t-_6.3) Smith, McCallister k Gibney, , Attorneys for Plaintiff. LEGAL NOTICE 1 3 0 Dora Nicholas, ake Mrs. Dora Muth, Rocemont, West Virginia, ahd Flem- ington, West Virginia, is hereby noti­ fied that. Oscar S. Nicholas, ake, Os- coe Simon Nicholas,, has filed a pe­ tition in the Common Pleas Court of Green* County, Ohio, against her, the j same being Case No. 24,363, praying for a divorce on the grounds of Gross Neglect of Duty and Extreme Cruel­ ty, and tha t said cause will com* on for hearing on or after six full weeks from the date of the first publication hereof. (4-5 8t- 5-10) BENJAMIN HORN, Attorney for Plaintiff U, B. Building, Dayton, Ohio, 1 For Dependable RADIO SERVICE M'Collistei Wanted washings and ironings to do. Call 6-2761 Cedarville. WANTED! Full time or p in t time laborers. Handy men. Welders, A carpenter. Blacksmiths, first class Machinists, and helper*. UNIVERSAL ATLAS CEMENT COMPANY* OSBORN, OHIO mmi. RHEUMATISM??? Com* t* Brewaa* Drag* Cedarville, O, RBINHtni MNOt Pipe, Valves and Fittinga far water, gas and ateaat,. Baal and Ma*trie INuepa fa* Hi ftirnsai* BeRe, FaN*f«* V Brits, Plaatlea# and Heating Sapplisa. 1 . P. BOOKLET! SUPPLY CO. X M U .M B O NOTICE ON FILING INVENTORY The State of Ohio, Greene- County. Probate Court To Harold W, Koogler, R.R. 1, Osborn,. Ohio, and Helen E. Koogler, R. R. 8, Box 604, Dayton, Ohio. You are hereby notified that on the' 26th day of March, A.D. 1916, an In­ ventory and Appraisement of the e s - ' tate of Pearl Koogler 'deceased, late of Beavercreek Township in said County, was filed in this Court. Said Inventory and Appraisement will be for hearing before, this Court on the 16th day of April, 1946, a t 10 /clock A.M» * 'Any- persons' desiring to file ex­ ceptions to said Inventory must file them a t least five dayB prior to the day set for bearing. Given under my hand and seal of. said Court, this 26th day of March, 1946. . w il l ia m b . M c C a l l is t e r , Probate Judge. Lawn Mowers sharpened, furniture repaired, toys built to order. Elmer Owens. ' v ! A NAME THAT STANDS I FOR GOOD 'f FURNITURE BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE A d a i r ’s N< Detroit St. Xenia, f t FARMS FOB SALE AND FARM LOANS We have many good farmsQfor sal* on easy terms. Also make farm loans a t 4 % interest for 15 years. No application fee and no apprais­ al fee. Write or Inquire McSavaney k Co. Leaden O, Leon H. Kling, Mgr, wMHWimiiiimimiiiifmiiiiiMimiimtiimirtwHWMWrtitren WE PAY FOR HORSES $5.00 COWS $3.00 According to Size k Condition Hogs, Calves, Sheep Etc., Removed Promptly XENIA FERTILIZER PHONE MA. 454 Reverse Charges K. O. Buchsieb, Xenia, Ohio i>iiiuimmie«niiiMimiwwmwmii>ilmMiiliii»w>iiiiwilllw TOP Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted, Reasonable Ch«t*w. Dr.C.LWiDui Optow rtrie Xy* Sjpnelnlfel HEidiii*’DM# ton Cc m p H i vm The Pres1 an Easter IV on Saturda; The Won of the Clif church held jng last Wi Mr*. David < Ferguson l e ' choosing as of Loyalty,* charge of tl Babin of Sj speaker. Itten, intnk Court, yilMHHI m and •ce ’be a rt * that the plain- etition in Sreene Cons ?*** No, 3$j petition of in the Cen lio and Villi »ry Survey William Toi| lyriJed and icing all of t) in G. the Village inty, Ohio, es conveye^ Rev. R. A W. Blckett i Bickett of C a t the Dedic Corinth Blv church in D afternoon. 1 ton, Iowa, gi iy Thomas ed dated Ml n Vol. 95, p Greene Con ed 11-7-191 I. 123 page Mr, Blaine Bickett of th terian churc Jamestown 1 Xenia Presb gave the rep on the World ufovement. petition is. real estate, equired to the 3rd da it may be ts ' AULTMAJ ley for Plai] 1 INVEN,T< Mr. A. Roj nited Presby Chairman oi rof Xenia P r terian churcl ’way, who hai of the -Presb: Greene Cop rold W, Kooj , and Helet ix 604, Daj Roush’ 93f will take can u a l.. Will ha few days. A Phone 6-2; fied that on ,D. 1936, ar, merit, of the r 'deceased, mship ■:in' this Court, d Appraiser efore this pril, 1946, e The Young iety -of the terian Churcl April 9, with and discussei. Church Move of the young meeting. ing to file ntory must, rys prior to hand and .h day of M| iCALLISTE ’robate Judg •pened, fumi o order. El Attention I' irf any sei ■ call u s .‘-PI ' ' Cummin- nmrnnmmiiniiilf T STAND )QD ROUSCH* PLAN Taking • .BLE Yours HER. Ceda. v. r ’s Xenia, GAS- United Stf vaporizer, watch, it is carburetor w a ir with the port substan gallon of gt If you woi car without iiiiiiiiiitiiiismitHiaf E AND FARM LOA 1farms for a Iso make in at for 15 yea and no appnl your name a Box 177, Ce satisfied wit yOur car, yo on request. ’ ing for live it in their m Inquire London ng, Mgr. >Hfinn»Hitinmimn AY One caps! volume de and comm referral. $5.00 $3.00 ; ft Conditio* Sheep Etc* romptly IA JZER S e a n levers* Charg Xenia, Ohio J ( AS m fitted, tble Charge* Wilki A T ic Ey# Hat >h in <sA

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=