The Cedarville Herald, Volume 54, Numbers 1-26
#* ' I xsm amAxmtA mourn today , rmv**x » , mi THE CBDARVILkE HERALD KMXm BULL EDITOR -AND PUBLISHER Eat«r«d ait the Rost Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 31,1887, M eecond class matter. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1931 LIBRARIANS W AN T TO DICTATE Governor George White has been placed on the carpet by the organized “ graduate librarians” in the state who have at tempted to dictate to him just who should and should not be named State Librarian. In other words we have the hired librarians beinsr paid from tax money from their respective dis tricts endeavoring to dictate an appointment that belongs to the Governor by virtue of law. It might be worthy of more notice if former Governor Cooper had not brought down the wrath o f the “ graduate librarians” on !}is head during his term. Contesting with Ohio governors seems to have an appeal with the salaried book handlers but so far the Governors have the best of it. Governor Cooper nanjed George McCormick as State Librarian and his service was very satisfactory to the people who ,evidently have little interest whether the book catalogers-had a “ sheep-skin” or not. v Gov. White is being criticized because he has recommended to the Library Board the appointment o f John Henry Newman, who had served in the same capacity in former years and had a good record, McCormick is a Republican and Newman, a Democrat, but the walking delegates o f the library union have no partizan quarrel on political lines, they only want the jobs n a n MgfeK h A rthu r B risbane I f there is a melting pet in tbe| social, economic and political scheme I of present day conditions it certainly can be found in a legislature, Here you find all the elements from every county in the state through members in the senate and house!* You have the best opportunity o f measuring the real standard of Ohio citienship as found through the legislators. A few days about the legislative hells is a university education, an experience that cannot be found elsewhere, The public reads of the doings o f legisla tures but never ha? the opportunity of knowing how the work is accom plished or how public opinion can he reflected for and against certain bills under consideration. Ptotpeap, F w si i Nat Crime’s Jseiwk Russia Witt Name Babies Properetut Ireland \ We decide to postpone the building of airplanes, submarines, airplane car riers and cruisers with airplane plat forms for fear o f arguments resulting in a special session. The french, logical, determined, al» lowing nothing to interfere with na tional defense, proceed to build, a series o f armored cruisers of 23,000 tons each to offset the marvelously efficient German cruisers, called “ min iature battleships.” money to British landlords. Irish banks are steady, tbe Irish free Shat# budget is sound. Those that used to tli^s ^Crisis (ww g went anybody hut themselves” may have been mistaken. They can also govern themselves, if you get off their backs. ■GSi It is no credit that Greene County had a librarian at the Colum- on record agaffist Newman for ap~ bus conference that went pointment. FARM BOARD ALL RUT WRECKED With the resignation of two leading members o f the Feder al Farm Board, one being Chairman Legge, this experimental plan of farm relief isolated for the. economic junk pile but not until Uncle Sam is out sgveral million dollars in aneffort to hold up the price of wheat by speculating with public money in the wheat market. The experience of the Board should be a warn ing to private individuals that even a Government hoard evi dently had no hold on a sure-thing proposition. Mr. Legge.if a great manufacturer-executive and his sincerity in lending aid to farmers cannot be questioned for his company must .depend on the farmer to buy farm machinery. What Mr. Legge has discovered is that farmers as individuals have never been sold on the farm board idea. It is an idle dream of farm politicians of the Brand type that are always more interested in buying a farmers vote on a new phantastical scheme that is really un known to everyone. And yet this type of farm statesmen speaks lightly of President Hoover, who has never been in full accord with the farm politician’s idea o l relief. The radicals have had jheir day^and Uncle Sam is out several million dollars while the farm politicians have been taking the* “ dirt farmers” for a “ ride” to garner votes. , W H Y PICK ON THE WOMEN? The Pillsbury family has offered a gift pf $25,000 to each o f four universities to be used to establish an “ anti-feminism” chair, or so'mething, the object being to develop public opinion against the modern feminist movement that “ tends to take women out o f the home.” ’ Three already have refused the gift and the fourth ia said to frown upon it. This is uncommon sense, uncommon because the refusal of gifts, even with silly strings attached, is toot usual in the history o f educational institutions in America., As one who has steadfastly declined to become excited over the so-called “ feminist movement” and has rejoiced in the emancipation o f the sex, we can see less need fo r an effort to keep women in the home than for one to keep the rest o f the family there, As a matter o f fact, had the Pillsbury family been willing to spend its money to arouse public demand that not only women, but men and children as well, stay home a little more} we would have been for the proposition. Men were the first to fly the home coop, returning only at meal time and to roost. When the women began following this example, there was a great hue and cry,, epitomized in the fatuous slogan, ‘Woman’s place is in the home.” It was only natural that the youngsters should emulate their elders. As a/result, no one stays home any more. What this country needs is a “ back to the home” movement that embraces both sexes, parents and offspring.—Dispatch, Columbus. NEWS REEL CENSORSHIP Secretary o f State Clarence J. Brown, publisher of six Ohio newspapers, has gone into the talkies: with a plea for the ex emption of news reels from state censorship. In a film now,being sho^njp theatres throughout Ohio, Mr. Brown advocates the adoption o f House Bill No. 126, introduce ed by Representative Goodwin o f Butler county. This bill, if it becomes a law, will remove news reels from the jurisdiction of the Board of Censorship. He argues, rightly, that “ newspapers and news reels have the same characteristics. * * Each is responsible to the public for the news material it contains, and if the rights p f any citizen,are violated by either, an appeal to the courts is always in orders . ' During the Davis adnnnistration the Board ,of Censorship abused its power-to the extent of cutting criticism of censorship from a news reel. The fact that Mr, Brown’s present appeal is permitted, without deletion, indicates a more sensible atti tude on the part of the present board. But the power, itself, is wrong and dangerous, ami, whim it is permitted to exist, the possibility of its abuse is always present. The American people would not tolerate official ccn sorship of printed news. There is no more reason for tolerating official censorship o f pictured news. The Goodwin bill ought by all means to be adopted, —Columbus Citizen Having some time while awaiting developments in which, the writer had personal and professional interest) we. dropped into a committee hearing where a proposed bill was under dis—| cushion o f interest to dairymen in Ohio. Representatives of a product on the market as a substitute for butter desired certain legislation favoring their business. Here we found fa rm .interests, and especially the dairy interests ready to take a stand for a branch o f agriculture that his many millions invested Hn Ohio alone. And France will continue buildm; submarines. She knows that airplanes and submarines represent, in the, high est, degree, the power to punish other nations, and that the nation with power to punish is the one that wil! not he provoked or attacked. If anybody attacked this nation through |ha air, it coOld only burst into tears.’ It Isn’t prepared to resent or punish anything. v - I f you ever become well-acquainted with a lady named Guillermina Guer rero, or one like her, don’t trifle with her affections. Maximino Aceval did that in Mexico City. Guillermina dreftsed herself its a boy, found faithless Maximino in a cabaret, dancing with another girl, followed, and- shot them' both. An opera like “ Cavalleria” or “ Pag- liacci” represents no exaggeration. The Latin temperament feels every thing, especially neglect, strongly, rhpse ■ that know say the affections are as violent as the jealousy. It must be an exciting life. People in Npw York, greatest state ,n population, are too busy to add to population as they did once. The birth rate bar fallen 30,000 in sixteen years. Birth control advocate# say the state is getting “ fewer and bright er babies,” but that is not convincing. To offset the tlecreased baby crop the general death rate is at its low est for all time. Of 1,000 population, only 11.7 die in a year. Deaths from tuberculosis are diminishin gsteadily, thanks to science.—On the-other hand, cancer add diabetes gather more and more victims. * , F U R N I T U R E REPAIRED and UPHOLSTERED At Prices In Reach Of Ererjboiy CharlesR.Hoerner PHONE - - - - - - - w - . Cedarville 148 Cor. Monroe A Lake Sto-» Xenia ....................... ...... .............................. .. LOCAL A / FORSAI.E par lb. Milton Mrs, Harry south o f town i.a m CAN BE CURED HEMORRHOIDS (OR PILES) , WITHOUT USE OF KNIFE WITHQUT LOSS OF TIME , t A successful treatment for internal and pretruding piles. Requires from four to seven treatments at intervals o f about ouct a week for a cure of the average case. Also the Ideal Non-Confining Method o f Treatment for Fistulae, Pruritis Ani (itching) and Fissure, etc. DR. J. A. YODER Osteopathic Physician and Proctologist 18,19,20 Steele Bldg., Xenia Phone 334 .FOR SALE- and mares. A! en. Harry Ke Xeale # Mr, and Mrs lumbiia pike, at of a son, Frid£2equirf Mr. Albert F*.*?*?* with double much improved’ Miss Elizabe Mr. and Mrs. ( to the McCleil last week for t * Before marketing your live stoek call THE SOUTH CHARLESTON STOCKYARDS DAILY MARKET ; Phone 80 3* K . SMOOTS P. P. SMOOTS MONEY PAID WHEN WEIGHED f 9 B A B Y C H I C K S Custom Hatching Reduced to 3c per Egg Thoroughbred Baby Chicks that produce largo pro fits for their owners, A hatch each -week. Write or phone for prices, PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW RALPH H. OSTER Oakwood Poulfay Farm YEU^ l m c i . o. In these hearings you gain informa tion from both sides that seldom get into print. Presentation of respective claims are from' men well trained and arguments given the committee sel dom corile from “ hot-heads.” Both 3 ides are as tactful'as the well versed lawyer in court. Neither has much to say against the opponents product and both sides bring out the bright side of points at issue. However information as to inferior qualities usually comes to the surface by direct questioning of some member o f the committee hearing the bill. In Britain a car called the “ Rorail,’ with two seta of wheels, has been suc cessfully fried on British railroad tracks and highways, . On the tracks it rolls on regular steel wheels. Ar rived at the end o f its rail journey, rubbered-tired wheels are lowered be low the level o f the steel wheels, which are inside o f the wheels with pneu matic rubber tires. And the coach motor bus or truck is.ready to leave the rails and finish its journey on the highway. If our railroads; used such vehicles, motor trucks and busses could not successfully compete with railroads between large eitjes as they do now. And the value o f the railroads' rightB of way would be at least double. We were interested in questions asked the dairy interests about certain ingredients in butter substitutes. We learned the “poor man’s butter” ,was made up o f ajbout .twenty-seven dif ferent compositions. There was men tion o f cream being used as well .as certain vegetable oils, fats animal rendered oils as a by-product from ioap manufacturers and even the use if garbage oils. Discussion along this line made us a more determined jser o f dairy butter from now on al though *U butter is buttey but butter is marketed by grades. There is but ter Made frpm sweet cream and soui cream and another kind from rancid cream that must have chemical treat ment before it dan-be used. It was evident that cheap butter probably never has a cl#|s one rating in grade. When a lion goes hunting, jackals follow. When he has eaten his fill they eat. Crime develops the jackals. When a killer had finished his man and left him lying dead in an alley, in the rear of 637 South State street, Chicago, two young men, twenty and twenty- two years old, following the murderer at a distance, stripped the corpse ol its clothing as their share. Detective Harold Fogarty got them and the clothing, including the shoes, A photograph shews one of the youths laughing as the clothing is held, be fore them. A boy could carry ail the bopks that Lincoln had opened when he was elected President. The qualities born in his brain, in herited from his father and mother and ancestors 1,000,000 years back, made him what he was. If he had succeeded in his efforts to secure a modest position in the In terior department, Lincoln' might have gone through life unknown. But none the' less he would have been Abraham Lincoln. WANTED TO BUY Reliable Draft Horse, not too old. ' Phone 4 on 69, Jamestown. O m Point af Vlaw All wants, -beyond those which • very moderate Income will supply, are purely Imaginary. A representative o f the butter sub stitute people when asked Btated that a large percent of their business was in the rural sections where farmers sold their cream and purchased a sub stitute.--This looked like a hard blow to the dairy interests for the speaker stated in the cities the better class of trade wanted first grade butter but families that lived on sriiall incomet used the substitute because it' was. cheaper as a rule. In connection with Russia’s plan to ;ohscript women forindustry, govern ment taking cire o f the babies white their mothers" are at work, yon read that this is. done because o f “ the pres- ;ent. serious sho^tage o f labor in Rus- 1sia.” You wiahtwe had that shortage here and wonder how the Russians manage it. . - ■ Russia’s plan-to open gigantic gov ernment nurseries to care for babies while mothers 'are working in mills, forests, fields, mines or factories, will present problems that not even Stalin can foresee. Separating women from their babies may be a dangerous ex periment,,even in Russia. Past Largely Mythical Those who compare the age- to which their lot bas fallen with a gold en age which exists only In Imagina tion, may talk of degeneracy and de cay; but no man who It correctly In formed as to the past will he dlapoted to take a moriwe or desponding view of the present.—Thomas Rsblngtoo. Lord. Macsnlay (1800-1809), “History of England,” When You Need Money • • a • • • • It is far better to have it in a savings ac count that"just in your memory. There is no harm in being a good fellow but there are limitations. If you spend your entire earnings without saving regularly a portion of it, you are exceeding your limit. Build up a fund for the future. The Exchange Bank Cedarville, Ohio Steps Foui Ba”jllow your rlya it. Largs Nswspspsr Csllsctlsa Wlmt is said to be the largest col lection of newspapers In the world has been opened to -the public In a newspaper museum at Alx-la-Chapelle. Germany. Among Us collection of 150,00b newspapers are curiosities from all over the world. Including an Eskimo paper from the middle of last century. There were representatives of con cerns that wholesale both butter arid the substitutes, and the latter strongly defended as a necessary pro duct. A representative of the grocers made the statement that grocers sold more substitute than real butter and when asked why stated there more of a margin of profit. It Is pleasant to hear o f anyone’s happiness, and you will be delighted to know that Ireland is highly pros- .perous, “ riding the wave of world de pression.” In 1930 the Irish exported more than $225,009,000 o f goods, which is bettor tha^ merely shipping M u r Mlrrora la Shop; With walls and celling completely covered with tiny mirrors, a barber ■bop bas been opened st Islington, England. M. Festa, the proprietor, cut plate glase mlrrora In pieces, tbe larg est of wblcb Is less than an inch square. He formed them Into many, shapes, from stars to roses, and paint ed them In all colors of tbe-rainbow. Nearly 250,000 pieces o f glass wars used. METROPOL IS HDLEASING service that antic* ^ ipates every conveniehce and oomfort o f the guest, complete appointments and distinguished nuliinr make it an ideal hotel for visit to CincmnatL Walnut between 6thand ?th (one square southofBus Terminals) W e will STATE R. OHIO, « t Sat 1929 — tween 1929— 7* 1929— » 1930— o/B“ 1928—1*naW 1 9 2 8 - 1927— 1 9 2 6 - 1925— 1 1 9 2 8 - 1926— “ was From the farm interests came the plea that the bill to let down the bars for substitute would only add greater problems for the dairy farmer in a time when there was a cry for relief. It was stated the entire dairy interests in Ohio represented an investment of hundreds of millions white there were only about 80 concerns in the entire United States making substitute, and only a few o f these in this state. The speakers for the dairy people did not urge any change in the present laws c'ontrolling the sale of substitutes but did oppose opening a new way for sub stitute butter to be sold in competi tion with cream butter. Argunients must have been all on the side of, the dairy interests for the committee hearing the bill desired by the sub stitute manufacturers voted unani mously to jrill it in the committee. One could not have heard these pleadings without basing his own de cision in behalf o f the dairy interests. But going further he was forced to admit that from now on he wanted nothing but first grade butter. Know ing that animal fats and reduction plant oils could not sound well for even a substitute, 'butter from rancid cream chemically treated was just as bad. Station WEAO, which is operated by the state university, broadcasts talks on agricultural subjects every Monday night. DON’T FAIL TO ATTEND Springfield’s Great Transportation Show *5 a * M E M O R I A L HA L L And BECKETT MOTOR BUILDING . All Next Week FEBRUARY 2 3 to 2 8 —AFTERNOON and EVENING Coma and Sat tba Nawast Modals in Passenger Cars Trucks Aeroplane Motors and Parts UNLIMITED PARKING for out-of-town visitor* Get Fne Perkin, Ticket Wheat Yen Buy Your A l a W « Ticket. PRICE OF ADMISSION. 10c ?J w ^ ' \e ■ 1924—_ The folic ta Phon W ei
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