The Cedarville Herald, Volume 57, Numbers 27-52
t CEDARVILLE HERALp, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1934 T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D KARLH BULL — — ■«— EDITOR AND PUBLISHER MEIIBBR—K.Uontl EiJHofUl Assoc.; Ohio Newspaper Assoc.; UUml Valley Press Assoc, Entered at the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 31,1887, as second class matter. _ _______ _ _____ _ ^ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1934 ________ T ~ TUGWELL’S HYMN OF HATE Rarely has a public o&cial more brazenly appealed to class hatred than did Dr. Tugwell in his broadcast attack on those who question the infallibility and omniscience ox the framei*s of the department of agriculture’s policies. This news paper, which has never concealed its sympathy for many aspects of AAA policy, can find no defense for a type ot argu ment which charges that the so-called “ Tories” would like to abandon the farms to speculators” ; “ would let the farmers starve” ; “ want the human beings who live on the land to be subject only to the will and convenience of the'Speculator? who thrive on confusion and calamity” ; or “ are trying to array labor against the farmers with the sole if unconfessed object of per petuating the speculative conditions which make exploitation a permanent part of the business system.” ■ This is rank demagoguery and, like much o f the rest or Dr. Tugwell’? broadcast, has no basis in fact. Dr, Tugwell cannot name one single individual who is; glad,. to_ see the farmers starve. He-cannot specify any man or organization that wants to see the farmers abandoned to the mercy of the speculator. Certainly he cannot find among the ranks of the “ Tories" any one who wishes to array labor against the farmers, even though he himself seems ready enough to array the farmers against the rest of the nation. Dr. Tugwell is intelligent enough to know that even if there were no natural sympathy for the farm population on the part of the urban and industrial leaders plain selfishness would dictate that anything which effectively Strengthens the prosperity of the farmers contributes to the well-being of the entire nation.. ■Dr. Tugwell deserves the strongest condemnation because of his stooping to use a tool which has heretofore been used chiefly in Soviet Russia—his ruthless attempt to stir up class hatred among the, farmers by appeal to their emotions through the age-jworn device of warning them against imagined “ op- •pressorsi” The farm problem is difficult enough without inject ing into its solution the element of government-stimulated hatred. The task that lies ahead of the AAA is such as to de mand the most thoughful co-operation of every one. This,im- plies that those who honestly believe that some of the experi ments of the AAA are unsound and unwise should be permitted - —even encouraged—to say so. It mean that .criticism should be welcomed— even by Dr. Tugwell. Above all, it imposes on such a man as Dr. Tugwell the obligation o f speaking truthfully and dispassionately even when he is seeking to combat the ris ing distrust of himself, his plans and many o f his associates. He tgains nothing personally and does his country a disservice by broadcasting remarks designed to arouse angry ^.passions and hatreds.—New York Herald-Tribune. for his wife, that.’ she would have little to worry about. The fund o f $35,009 in 4 1-4 Liberty Bonds pro vided an income o f about $1,487. Under the refinancing plan the aged lady will get $625. She is 82 years old and must have a paid companion and live out o f the generosity o f the New Dealers. The husband created , the trust fund thinking his wife would | bo amply cared fo r the remainder o f her life hut along comes the govern* ment endorsing the breaking o f con tracts, and reduces her income to a dangerous point. One o f the significant events in coir- As we open our Monday morning mail we get a message from the Ohio Farm Bureau and find that farmers that look with some suspicion on the AAA program may ,be . all wrong. Richburgh, mouthpiece for the NRA and other Communistic branches of the government, reported a few days ago o f the billions that now swell the „ ,. ... .. . , - , , ., , „ ., ,, . nection with the present national ad- farmers pocketbook, all the result of . . . . . . * , . . .. it. xr r» i * ministration is the latenesB of the the New Deal. After a page review .. „ . , . „ ,, . . . . . _ . „ r . . time When the finance or Ways and of all the braintrusters m Washing- . . • ... , _ • . . , „ . ., , . , Means committee o f Congress is to ton have dorte for the farmer we take , ,, , . ■ . .. ■ . v .. c j .{■ . . be called together to map out exit everyone must be satisfied, that i s „ . . A - ... .. t, ,, ' ; ■ . -penditures and income ready for con- if the Farm Bureau is authorized to „ „ „ „ „ . .. . ' ... , . „ „ gress when it convenes. The New speak for all. Farmers that have . , s . .. .. / ., , .. , Dealers do not want to disturb the been forced to have the processing' ...- . . ; , , ~ . electorate m dealing with a big tax taken off the price paid them for ^ . ^ fa revenue ^ the bilHons o f expenditure previous to election time so the committee will not be called until November 16th. This is the first time in the history o f the A CLEAN NEST FOR THE BLUE EAGLE The AAA. did jt all and would have done move if not for the drouth. We take the last paragraph from the propaganda sheet: “ The farm bureau . .. . . . ,, .. - ' ■ . ,, • . , . present generation that the time for was one o f the national farm organ- the gathering o f this committee has izations that assisted in securing the . set ftt 80 ,ate a datef even in passage o f the Agricultural Adjust-1 yeara when e8timate8 o f needed rev. ment Act for the purpose o f getting enue werd ^ jn the hundreds o f better prices for basic agricultural miii ion8 to say nothing o f billions, products. The packer and the retail -1 when it comeg to bunk no adminis. cr say here is a buyer’s boycott on |tration has eyen put forth much 1,01 1 ie Pt|c* o hogs on tho misrepresentativc information to the gradual decline where is the A A A jpubHc as the NRA and AAA . Under '. jthe former is the Housing. Act, so- " ■" called part o f. the recovery program; The largest Conference in Method- The public is givan the idea that ism opened its annual sessions Tues- money comes from Uncle Sam's bar- day in Zanesville.. During the cpn-'rel and all you have to do.is to apply fer.e'nce the 150th- anniversary o f to some .financial institution. The Methodism will be • observed. The sponsors would have you believe that history o f the church dates back to the financial management cannot re-. John Wesley. The first confei ence fuse asy request but what are •the' was held in Baltimore in i784 at which facts. 1 We give you some' o f the ex- time the name o f Methodist Epis- perience o f a young father that want-- copal was adopted. It is said that a cd to borrow $400 for home repair, congregation was first started in New The financial institution gets its in- Vork city_ as early as •1768. . 'Ohio structions from the government just first heard o f Methodism .in 1787 but how the' money is to be loaned, but. was not formally organized until 1793 they are different than what the bor- in Cincinnati. The Ohio Conference lower is made to believe.- When the is the largest in the denomination and young man had completed arrange- n.iany important subjects are before it |i'icnts after giying his family history for settleipent this-week. Like all back for. three generations,'he was in placed under government operation. We understand the government now holds kundreds o f cotton farms in the south producing cotton- in competi tion with farmers that do not owe the government anything. The New Deal program o f Socialism is fast spread ing its stenants into every line of activity. It took the union shoe workers’ but a few minutes and in select words to inform Roosevelt that relief forkers would make no .shoes in competition.with shoe manufact urers. It was not surprising when the President suggested that relief_work- ers be put to some other form o f labor. Tuesday dispatches state the government will open a hosiery plant in Cleveland and take over a stove plant in Dayton to manufacture stoves. In Delaware a chair factory is planned. All these products are to be given away at the expense o f the taxpayers.* To complete; the list we may yet see the government taking over lumber yards, automobile.factor ies, and breweries, giving the products away. The government anarchists may yet dispose you o f * your o\jm home for the benefit o f another. other religious denominations it has serious . problems for consideration due to economic .conditions. ■ In speaking o f church . affairs we read ansinteresting article some days ago by Roger "Babson, the noted statistician, -who has- made some re cent observations in regard to church [attendance. On the basis o f popula- The foul nest in which the Blue Eagle has perched itself for months is to be discarded by President Roosevelt. The old bird has lost much of the lustre of its plumage, its tail feathers no longer show the once proud hautiness. Roosevelt, Johnson & Co. have become alarmed that the old bird no longer ap pealed to people so this, week the emblerq of the NRA was given a clean nest. The NRA is to be turned into what is noth ing more than what came out of Atlanta, Ga., a few years ago, the. Kli Klux Klan form of government. It is now proposed to adopt once again the. cut and dry method and under the NRA i(ion New York Cit and Washington; have legislative, judicial and executive branches, with John-j D c have the lowest rcent Be of son all three m one. The idea of a change would look to the church attendance. lB aT)alyzing the public as if something new was to be tried but it is the same old lsituation Babson laces much of the thing, Johnson the dictator under NRA. There is nothing in blame for non church attendance on the new plan that will yet give small business a chance and : the home where influe„ce from the more than that, Johnson has no sympathy with the small busi- ^ stand oint .g what nessman. His associates are leaders of some of the largest * VPJlr„ . Wall Street monopolies that are gradually crushing all small u. .. , th. worW npml, „ . . A , . . competition. Mr. and Mrs. Consumer long ago learned that the Blue Eagle in any kind of a nest was a dirty deal to t|.em. II r U I T , . " ! S n T w . . . [York City a mixture of all races of RECEIVERSHIP FOR STATE LIQUOR DEPARTMENT \ ' lie globe, thousands that never- had The Republican convention last week took notice of the n,the ^mor^a" establishment of state liquor stores by the present Democratic ' p, , .. A ousan<s at administration. From one angle it could be expected that such T ' L i h ? ' e1‘Iucat,0"’ action would be taken from a political party standpoint. While ‘ f ' " d; the placing of the automobile licensing under the highway de- aivt)ut w«<ihinirfnn n partment has nothing to do with the state liquor business we Dh u ! C'ty wish to compare the attitude of the convention -on the two 's mad<i up °f office ho,dcr8 and gov' issues.. If the Republicans wanted Clarence J. Brown, as.the next governor, to have a big patronage list, it would not have . . . . Njr&ed a change and placing the department back where it ^ ^ ** f a,n,ng and rightfully belonged. For this reason the liquor department M . ,. s? . y n®ccssary- might also be good political patronage, but evidently this Cfame, r°m -the thought was not in mind or the subject would have been ignored . ■ , ve 1?na re(iu,re‘ -------- luents, where church influence no gov ernment employees. Most all were appointed or given a position for some in the convention. doubt was dominant. Yet we are told formed he could get the loan on con dition that he pay about $40 a' month, not promise but had to agree to meet •such payments! above everything else. His income was $125 a month and had to live in a neighboring city, and Fad no assurance o f how long he .could h-.Id his job . in a, factory. The in terest figured about nine, per cent be fore the loan would be paid. It did not -take the applicant long to decide that he could not meet the terms. The long months. property owners and financial institutions jhave to wait' on getting HOLC and'-federal, land loans, is more proof that the administration is oply floating along until after another election! Those who have watched the drift away from prohibition did not get. comforting returns from the original dry state, Maine, a t,the election Mon day, when the electorate in that state voted 3 to 2 to abolish prohibition from the constitution. All the force the Roosevelt administration could muster was sent into that state to back the New Deal and repeal. Pub lic improvements amounting to more than $43,000,000 was the dangling bait to voters in that state, all at the expense o f the rest o f the states of the nation. It was nothing more than the outright purchase of votes. The net result is the political complexion of Maine will remain as it has been the past two years, a Democratic i i ' i. jl * jl * 1.1 x. j i 1 it i« * i |« wit vuiu|viii« tt i v u utt of ci d At p r e s e n t a su it IS th r e a t e n e d t o t h r o w th e s ta te liq u o r the percentage o f attendance is one'governor, two New Deal congressmen, ac in VAfiaii/aranin amh.ra hnnHvflH f Vi ahooyi H rtnilo n f » .i i . _ ° * stores in receivership, several hundred thousand dollars o f / o f the lowest in the country: It is liquor not having been paid for at this time. But it is not the nothing to he proud of. Certainly the financial side we are looking at altogether. There never was attitude o f the present administration a time under the old-time saloons when young, boys and girls with its socialistic tendency, depart- could purchase liquor as easily as at present. In those days ments of government headed by such politics never played as prominent part as it does under the men as Tugwell and his “ Wine present system. Churches and homes in those days had some Women and Song” theory o f life- consideration'but under the present law, you can open a grog- others who refuse to recognize the shop by most any name in any residence neighborhood, and power o f the Divinity, and “ Shotgun” have the backing of the state. Under the old-time saloon the Johnson with his bombast, what hope cheapest kind of liquor is said to have been a better grade than would Babson have in ever having a what the state has to offer at three times the price. : chance in revising his statistics on The convention was right in calling attention to the state church attendance in the Nation’s in the liquor business. It can be expected that the Democratic , Capital? ■convention will endorse the present system, that is if the pre sent administration can have its say. It has been a prosperity step for several hundred new office holders, • Repeal was adopted in Ohio by a large vote but sentiment is fast changing. Nothing will bring repeal back as quick as continuing the present system. Residence sections in our wettest cities are now in revolt and appealing to the state for relief but get nothing more than ia deaf ear. - . . 4 ^ --------- -- • ’ *V Gov. White reminds Ohioans that the state must have $61,000,000 new revenue by the first of the year. What ah order for the NRA prosperity boosters in Ohio. Government bonds continue to drop in pried but this should not alarm the brain-trusters until at least one pay day passes. England is taking our pork in exchange for whiskey, but how is this to help relieve our corn market? T Representing THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY o f Milwaukee, Wisconsin MADDEN G. RALSTON Special Agent (Office) 20th Floor Mutual Home Building . Phonet Adams 1296 Dayton, Ohio The New Deal announces a new is sue o f government bonds, a mere one billion, seven hundred and seventy- four million and few odd hundred thousand. Such, a sum o f .money is beyond the comprehension o f any o f us and no doubt- most people will think little o f it, for that one reason. Nevertheless it is part o f the new deal debt, and part refunding of the World War debt. Instead o f paying old debts the present .day idea is to keep going deeper in debt and rewriting old debts. Such a plan is not Socialism but pure Communism. The rate of interest On part’ will be as low as 1 % per cent on two year notes. On 10- 12-yenr bonds.3 1-4 per cent and 4- year at 2V 6 per cent. If you cannot read between the lines on what the government is doing withits own bonds, you can stick a pin in thin for future reference. Low interest rates on government securities means ns low rates on investments in financial institutions, During the ' past two years scores o f trust funds establish ed not only fo r widows and children but for hospitals, libraries, colleges and schools have been reduced to al most nothing. A prominent Dayton churchman after giving llbaraliy to several o f his church institutions, left a trust fund previous to his death one Republican congressman and a Republican senator re-elected but by a rather close vote. Prohibition is yet many years away. The public mind under economic stress cannot be attracted by argument. No one knows this more than President Roosevelt, wh,o js using all forms o f misrepre sentation; proposals to keep the aver age citizen confused; promises to a- lure, many of which he never expects to be fulfilled during his term o f of fice. He is surrounded by fanactics o f the Socialist type fresh from European capitals with ideas that twenty-five years ago would not even be credited to Harry Thaw, who de veloped the “ brain storm.” The AAA is now in the market to purchase several million sheep to pass out in the relief program. On the streets o f every town and city are scores and thousands out o f work but not to cut corn. But why cut-com ? The farmer should not ask himself that question. What the farmer should consider is whether he should continue to produce wheat, corn, pork, beef and mutton, to be sold in a market in competition with free flour and meats. Labor does not have to cut com unless it so chooses. With the-c government providing food, clothing, fuel and some property own er furnishing rent free, what the farmer should do is to get on the re lief list nr.d have the government working for him. While’ the government is engaging in allldnds o f business in competition with private fntenprise the boldest stroke yet offered comes in a news teport that one o f the many brain- trusters suggests that aA fast as farm owners default on payments on loans made by the government the farm be taken over by the government and NOTICE OE APPOINTMENT VEAL CALVES Drought conditions in the Middle West will reduce the supply of calves from that section. There is a limited number of veals in this territory. Wouldn’t it pay you to raise your calves at the prices paid at our market? SALE EVERY MONDAY Springfield Live Stock Sales Co. Sherman Ave. Phone Center 796 Springfield, Ohio - Estate o f M. Dora Hill, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that John W. Collins has been duly appointed as administrator o f the. estate o f M. Dora Hill,, deceased, late o f Cedarville, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 11th.day of September, 1934. S. C. WRIGHT, Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. Subscribe fo r THE HERALD A T T E N T I ON F A R M E R S Your Seed Wheat Recleaned at Your Granary at a Cost of 4 Cents Per Bushel. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, DATE , ETC., CALL LEROY JACOBS 16 F 21 Clifton Exchange ADAIR’S A re Buying Their Furniture Here .............There’s A Reason! ^ They want their home to be SMART. Adair’s is the one store to be sure o f STYLE. tYou hear it everywhere—“Shop at Adair’s for Better Values and Lowest Prices.’’ . Mz.ss.-r > SELECT YOUR COAL * HEATING STOVE Pay Only Small Amount Down Parlor Furnaces, $19.50 up ^ Oak Heaters, $16.00 up Charles o f London Living Room Suites You’ll like the style of these suites—and the fine new covering fabrics. Choice of new coverings. Imported construction. 2 Piece SuiU $ 79.00 r (Similar To Illustration) Occasional Chairs These chairs are covered in choice' new f a b r i c s , 25 chaire to ee> lect from. Magic Chef Gas Range With all the features of thd highest priced . i Range, Special— < y j * Solid Oak Decorated Five Pc. Dinette Set As good looking a dinette as anyone need have. E:;iC,i.:a to 5 fast, easily accommodates 6 persons. fe 'V jS Table, 4 chalra ........................................... S O . I Q 60 Days Same As Cash Oil Amounts Over $10.00 { J ADAIR’S 24 N. Detroit Xenia, Ohio This 8 Piece 1 Dining Room Suite $ 79. 00 Here Is a most pleasing style. Built of walnut and hardwood. Special construction^ features in sure sturdiness. Suite consists of Buffet, Table, 5 Chairs and 1 Arm Chair. L o c a l ai Custom Huv.ii fo r a Mjw'yi-i ■ you need cusiu; Phone 59. Fdr Kali- Im ning or eating Do not fail . ment of a sale antiques Tbui><] Jobe estate in V Mr. Alien '1 u his school won-, faeulty in the i Cleveland. Miss Martha ing her vacant Mrs, Charles C Marquette, llii member of tin Normal Collegi Mrs. John \\. her- daughter-in Ross, and so ■where they joo. o f Iowa City. ’ tqry of Progrr Mrs. Ross ret hi - this week. Prof. O. \V daughter, Moliu the week in former has been convention of i! Society. Miss Florenc been spending I has retui’ned u where she tear lege in that cit> Attorney Fr< wife and son y J len Weimer, Sa each year to ati union in Xenia. The ladies of their annual )>k opening of the A nesday afternooi Victor Bumgard On Sabbath o Butler gave a turcs of 10 dill'c ing the Passion tended on her t pictures were Church of Clift, ;ed by many win , Mr.. William Fla., formerly .i place, has been relatives here tl TH E
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