The Cedarville Herald, Volume 57, Numbers 27-52
CWPASVJtX* HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER *8, 1»S4 T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D * ,l7 f g g s g KAJUUH BULL :--------- — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER .’r r " - * 1* - 1 a«to*|M AM4C.; QM* K h M*ae,i Ml**l ValUy fin* A moc . BafcKrtd at the Poafc Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 31,1887, aa aecond claaa matter. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1984 FOREIGN DEBTS UNPAID; ANOTHER NOW DUE Now that the, Ohio legislature Is In session and the sales tax Is up for consideration you should keep close It is now leaa than one month, December 15, when another tag on some o f the things that will payment on foreign debts due this country will be payable. All be attached to this bill? When a foreign nations except little Findland, have repudiated their: ............. ~ ’ ’ debt and interest payments, amounting to hundreds of millions.1 The interest payment due next month is $150,000,000 and Eng- : similar bill was offered by Gov. White imonths ago it provided an appropria- i u V- ( uw . vbv .rTV ________ ____T_ . ____________ - .............. „ jtion pf $900,000 to pay adbinistration land, France, Germany, Italy and other nations will ignore what jcosts due to appointment of 600 per- ” ’ ’ " - * ‘ sons to collect the tax. It will be interesting to see how much the Gov. ernor wants under the sales tax bill offered Tuesday. is due this nation. Not only have the major countries repudi ated debts due us but have restricted purchases of American made goods, and this helps to increase our unemployment. One of the promises of the Roosevelt administration during the campaign was a closer business relation with foreign countries that would lead to payment of money due us. The country realized the Hoover policy towards foreign nations was not leading to payment of these debts and a blanket order was given Roosevelt. When the present administration took office nearly two years ago several countries were paying on the in terest and had not repudiated the debt. Since that time the Roosevelt administration has made no effort to make collection and all interest payments have stopped except for Findland. Meantime the administration has spent billions more than our national income making the debt of this country arpund twenty- seven billion dollars, far more than our war time debt. National and state taxes in amounts never before known now face our citizenship for generations to come. Foreign loans were made by. a Democratic administration, under Woodrow Wilson, who kept us out of the war and then plunged us in, to save D em o c^ y , munition makers and Wall street. In that administration was Barney Baruch, Wall street broker, who was the confident of Wilson. It was he that set up the wheat control plan under Hoover as food administrator, that limited the price of wheat to the farmer and left it open for wheat speculators, who made hundreds of millions. * Today the inside informant of the Roosevelt administration is this same Wall street broker, whose name seldom gets into public print. We worry about Tugwell, Wallace, Bullitt, Moley and Richberg, along with other braintrusters, but you have more to fear from Baruch than all the rest combined. Much of the so-called rebellion of Wall street against the administra- is stag~play, manufactured to fool the public. Study the financial pages of the Wall Street Journal and follow the list of Wall street corporations as they report earn ings for the year under NRA and the New Deal. Dividends amounting to hundreds of millions will be paid lucky holders of these stocks. Look over the list of smaller corporations. Few if any will be able to pay dividends as they must operate under the crushing hand of regimentation directed by the powers of the large competing companies with the approval of Roosevelt as head of the NRA kingdom. So far Roosevelt has taken no position to lift the, financial burden from the.shoulders of our oWn citizens but has remained in quietude while foreign nations repudiate debts and now faces the task of taxing his own subjects to save this nation from bankruptcy. ' VOTERS REAPING WHAT THEY SOWED We are beginning to hear complaints and objections to the passage o fasa les tax by the legislature whereby the neces sities of life are to be taxed to get the state more revenue. If the bill becomes a law, and there seems no other way out of it, the arm of the state will "reach into the pocketbook of each citizen ,every time a ten cent purchase is made. It has been contended, and properly so, that with a decent state administration, cost of government could be reduced to an extent that no new taxes would be necessary. The plight o f the schools in particular is that the White administration ap propriated all available funds for state purposes and salaries o f hundreds of politicians, giving the excuse that the schools would be cared for later. When the time came for school revenue there was no money available without.additional taxes. Division arose and the financial plight of the state grew worse month by month. Members of the legislature are now debating pro and con over provisions of the sales tax bill. During the campaign Clarence J. Brown charged the Democratic administration had wasted public funds on useless, political appointees and that by adopting reasonable business, methods there would be funds for all needed purposes, As we live under a rule of the majority and the pleading of Mr. Brown was ignored there is nothing to do but dig deep into the pocket and often to pay for the blunders of the White administration. The proposed sales tax law provides for nearly a million dollars to pay salaries of new appointees to administer the sales tax jaw—with every business house collecting the tax for the state. The record should be kept clear, the state administration is Democratic, and both branches of the present legislature are controlled by that party. Postmaster General Farley has informed you the Republi can party is “ dead.” Accepting his statement as .true, the con suming public can lay no blame on that party for the raid that is to be made on your pocketbook to pay the handsome salaries o f several hundred more Democratic politicians that will be ap pointed to administer the law— Ohio’s part in the New Deal, CRITICIZING THE PRESIDENT Patriotism means to stand by the country. It does not mean to stand by the President or any other public official save exactly to the degree in •which he himself stands by the country. It is patriotic to support him in so far As he efficiently serves the country. It is unpatriotic not to oppose him to the extent that by inefficiency or otherwise he fails in his duty to stand by the country, * * * One form of servility consists in a slavish attitude—of the kind in compatible with self-respecting manliness—toward any person who is power ful by reason of his office or position, Servility may be shown by a public servant toward the profiteering head o f a large corporation, toward the anti- American head o f a big labor organization, It may also be shown in peculiarly noxious and un-American form by confounding the President or any other official with the Country, and shrieking “ stand by the President," Without regard to whether, by so acting, we do Dr do not stand by the Country.—Theodore Roosevelt, in the Metropolitan Magazine, May, 1918. FINISHED HOGS A ll weights of finished hogs bring excellent returns on this Monday Market. At our sale on the 19th (this week) the price rang was from $5.50 to $5.75 on weights 180 lbs. up, or a premium of from 20c to 85c per cwt. make o u t MARKET TOUR MARKET Springfield Live Stock Sales Co. Sherman Ave, Phone: Main 815-J Springfield, Ohio Warning is continually - being sent out by the government about the hog processing tax. Newspaper offices get them probably hefore the farmer does. One naturally thinks the gov ernment regards most farmers as bootleggers of pork instead o f liquor. Now you are a criminal if you duck the processing tax. The Roosevelt administration wanted repeal and re turn o f liquor to reform the liquor bootlegger. A local processor lapt week was assessed a fine of $8.50 be cause his check arrived, one day late. New Deal—low priced liquor and high taxed pork. Reports of easiness in Washington over the slowness in which govern ment loans are being repaid are in dicated by a suit against stockholders of a Chicago bank, now in liquidation, headed by Charles G. Dawes, who borrowed eighty million from the RFC. Stockholders have been sued for fourteen million by the govern ment, HOLG announces no more new applications for loans and we hear of a foreclosure suit against. a home owner in Champaign county. Indi cations point to a tightening on farm loans, all due to the fact that present loans are1not being paid as fast as the government expected. The New Dealers cannot understand why loans and interest are not. paid promptly after the favors the government has extended. 1Probably borrowers havie not been able to cash in yet on the in flated New Deal prosperity we are enjoying. . With Senator Borah pounding with sledge hammer blows of evidence of waste and political graft against the national administration in the manner in which federal relief has been handled, the Roosevelt administration seeks new issues each day to keep the public mind interested in posies and songs of birds we are to hear when we reach the promised land under the New Deal. When it is not TVA it will be AAA , anything else but the Borah indictment that in one state it cost $572 to. handle a $4 relief order. In another state it cost $576 to ad minister an expenditure of $6 for re lief. The important thing the Senator failed to bring out was the relief to the extent of $572 to a few Demo cratic politicians in ' that favorite state. M i St M. and B. St L. ACCEPTED AT FULL VALUE ON DENTAL WORK EXTRACTIONS—GOLDPIN PLATES AT LOW BRICES TO SUIT YOU One Day Service on All Work if Needed NEW PLATES—$ 1 # and $15 REPAIRS — $1 to $8 M L G* A . SM ITH , D en tist ' X 4 tay—Extraction* A«l**p fir Awake—Sfie Up lift W. High St. SmithBMg., Springfield, O. MainMft All of which brings us down to the Ohio Relief organization as set up by the White administration. There have been mutterings in Columbus for months about many different brands of graft in connection with the relief organization. It might be well for the Senator to visit Ohio and demand the federal investigation start here, right where the White administration will leave off on January 1. Whrit the cost per person has been in Ohio no one can estimate, the politicians have buried the figures. Uncovering the - purchase of relief supplies, in cluding Ohio’s venture in the liquor business will be interesting.' Demo crats that have never made a pair of shoes are bossing state operated shoe factories; other Democrats that never made a bed tick, chair o'r stove are on pay at 1929 salaries in the name of relief. Every family on the relief list in Ohio could have at least one third more in the market basket were it not for hundreds of hungry Democrats eating up relief funds, The clamor will be heard for everything but an investigation. But Senator Borah lias a way of making himself heard, The big thing in the Ohio set up is the purchase of supplies, who from and at what price ? During the season while the poli tical mortiean haB charge of the G, O. P. there is nothing to do but can vass fast moving events and time will pass quickly during the next eighteen months. Much of the water that has passed the mill dam will be caught below for purification. For instance out in NeW Mexico Senator Cutting, Republican came to Roosevelt’s rescue in the campaign against Hoover, wns given the double-cross by both the President and Postmaster General Farley in the last election, when they urged the election of a Democrat. In Wisconsin the President turned down the Democratic nominee for Sen. La- Follette, who was a third party nominee and is urging formation of new party. Gov. Olsen, Minnesota, Farm-Labor, executive, defeated the Democratic nominee. Down in King- fish land come reports that Senator Huey Long Is casting his eye on the Democratic nomination having captur ed that state, even agAinst the in fluence o f federal patronage as dished out in Washington. The Roosevelt ALIAS-SHERIFF’S 5ALE forces tried their best to down Vie' ... Donahey in Ohio but V»§ won and his Arttar statement that he would support Roosevelt “when he’s right" still stands. The administration has even run out on Sen. Bulkley following that famous interview when plans of monetary change were in the making by Roosevelt. Every New Dealer in Washington was quick to brand the je. A. Alta, *t sl , OrffM Count; Ctaaw PI ms Court Cut No. 1I8S1 Onto or Sato UIM In pumunro of ■in orttor iMucd from th* Common Plots Court, within and far tho County of Groono, nnd State of Ohio, aud* at tho October tarn thereof, a , D„ 1984, and to mo dtrooted, I will offer tar sale at Public Auction on the premises, at the Altai Xlerator, 8. Main St., Codnrrlllo, Ohio, on Saturday, December 28, 1934, ft If o’clock A, X., of lie on Bulkley but those that knowing wM D»r, the foiiowiug described sen! Bstato, something of political movements, ° first tract : Being Lot Number Forty- have just as good reason to believe <**» (41) In O. W. Dunlap'a addition to tho VlUago of Cedarvllle, as the same is dealgnat ed, known and recorded on the plat of nald addition In tlio Recorder’s Office of eald At >nv mtp thp 'County, together with all the appurtenance# to At any rate tne (JlBwnw t>eloncfnc. Roosevelt was planning just what the Senator said and to which he no doubt disapproved. Bulkley interview up to this time has) second tract : Beginning at an iron caused Roosevelt to talk on other sub-i**’**6 **‘®Nl cor“" «tT,Ul* * tw* . , ,, . _ . ■■ . _ , aectlon of tho southerly line of the P. C. C. * jects than Silver inflation. Vice Presi-jst. Louis Railroad Company and the North- dent Garner and Southern Democracy !««*terly line of South Main street; thence , . . . • .along the railway land aa the compass now may have something to say since ,81d, N, r,5. w w. iVt >eet u> a point In the northwesterly line of said Halo Street at 3 notch*# on the fence; thence along same N, 34* W. ISO feet to the place of beginning, containing 558-1900 of an acre of land as surveyed by R, Hood, Xiq. Lot No. 1 Jnsby Add. Beginning the same premleoe aa Tract No. 1 and 2 described In the deed from E. A. Alien to MlUon Yoder, dated March 12, 1919, and recorded In Yol, 122, page 42, Greene County Deed Record*, NO HUNTING No hunting with dog or gun will be permitted on the following farms: Anderson Finney F O. Harbison James Vest Massies Creek Cemetery Assoc Ralph Kennon A. M. Peterson Robert McGregor NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate p f Elizabeth C, Blair, Deceased Notice ie hereby given that Mary J. MeHUlan hag been duly appointed as Executor o f the estate o f Eliza beth C. Blair, deceased, late o f Cedar- Iville, Greene County, Ohio, j Dated this 18th day o f November, 1934, S. C. WRIGHT, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. , t e o 2 M’iiiOlliHUilNii.UirtHtWi’ir[UIHmHMBiH Roosevelt has made Donald Richburg, Assistant President, and this’ keeps Jack down in Texas. The constitu tion provides for a Vice president but the New Deal enthrones a Labor Union attorney as “Assistant Presi dent.” Reid premWea hove been appntged at Eight Springfield just recently opened a .Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty 138,250.00) new postofflee building and now comes * * tha" tw°‘ “ :-------J - ’ — 1 TERMS OF SALE: CASH. JOHN BAUGHN, Sheriff, of Greene County,;Ohio, Frank L. Johnson, Attorney. i (12-2Id) an important ^decision as to what to do with the old building centrally lo cated. The city wants it for admin istrative offices. The school board has an eye on it for conducting the federal supported classes. The Ohio National Guard unit has no armory and wants the building converted for its use. SHERIFF'S SALE What is to become o f the contro versy that goes on each year follow- ;ng the hunthg season? Ohio licenses hunters, some 400,000, to turn them loose on farms, for there is no other place for them to go. It is true the state has no power to permit hunters to trespass farm land without the con sent of the owner but this puzzles the1 hunter who has put up his money. As a rule few ask permission o f land- owners. This year is no different than in former years. We hear of damage here and there to livestock and fences and especially careless shooting. This year brings two complaints from dif ferent parties who claim that evidence of liquor resulted in wreckles3 shoot ing. Shotgun liquor and powder are certainly dangerous in any quarter. Unless the average hunter is more considerate o f the rights of land- owners there will be little use of tak ing out a license. Monday was an important anni versary date in this country as the 71st anniversary of the , famous Abraham Lincoln Gettysburg address when he uttered: “ that government of the people, for the people and by the people should not perish from the earth.” What would the same Lincoln say today if he shoAld return to earth and learn that Gov. White had order ed the word “ Republican’* stricken from his name on a plaque in the statehoiise. How would he view “ government of, by and for the people?” under the New Deal with regimentation of agriculture by dicta tion. With the union walking dele gate exercising presidential executive powers, dictating to industry and in dependent labor, is hardly in line with the sentiment as expressed by Lincoln in his famous Gettysburg address. The Home Building and' Barings Co. va. John P. Karl, et at., Greene County Common Pleas Court. - Case No. 17680 Order of Sale 17680 In pursuance of an order Issued from the Common Pleas Court, within and for the County of Greene.. and State of Ohio, made at the October term thereof, A. D., 1934, and to me directed, I. will offer for sale at Public Auc tion at the West doer of the Court House, in DECEMBER 29, 1934 tlie City of Xenia, on . at 10 o'clock A. M., of said Day, the follow ing described Real Estate, to-wit: Situate In the Township of Cedarvllle, County of Greene and State of Ohio, and bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a stone in tho middle of the Xenia and Columbus Pike corner to John Ford; thence i South 88 0 K. 23.30 poles to a stake lu Chariutomti line in the middle of the turn pike: thence with Samuel Charieton’s line S. 8Vj° W. 13 poles to 'a stake;, thence North 71° W. 83 poles to a stake in the middle of the turnpike;' thence(with said turnpike N. 43%° K, 16.16 poles' to the place of beginning, containing three and sixty-nine one-hundredths (3.69) acres.. Said premises are located on tlie South side of the Xenia and Columbus Pike about % mile East of “ East' Point.” School House. Said premises have been appraised at Three Thousand (93.000.00) Dollars, and can not sell for less than two-thirds of the ap praisement. TERMS OF SALE;—CASH. JOHN BAl'GHX, Sheriff, of Greene County, Ohio. Harry D. Smith, Attorney. SHERIFF’S SALE The Homo Building ami Savings Co. vs. John P. Karl, et si., Greene County Common Pleas Court. Case No. 10216 Order or Sale 19246 io ptireiiancc of an order Issued from the Common Picas Court, within and for the County of Greene, and Stale of Ohio, made at the October term thereof, A. D., 1934, and to me directed, I will offer for sale at Public Auc. tlnn at the West door of the Court House, In the .City of Xenia, an DECEMBER 29. 1934 at 10 o’clock A. M., of said Day, the follow ing described Real Estate, io-wft: Situate In. the State of Ohio, County of Greene nrnl Village of Cedarvllle, and being llic whole of Lot Numbered Seventy-two (72) in Snmtilc Nesbitt’s ct al., addition to the Village of Ccdarvilio, Ohio, as the same is dealglinted, .numbered and known on the recorded pint of said addition. (Said pre mises being situate on (lie South side of Cldilleothe Street, West of Main St., Cedar- vine, Ohio) Said premises have been appraised at Eighteen Hundred ($1,890.69) Dollars, and can not sell for less Ilian two-tlilrds of tho ap praisement. TERMS OF SALE:-CASH. JOHN BADGHN, Sheriff, of Grceno County, Ohio, Harry D. Smith, Attorney, MAN WANTED for Rawleigh route of 800 families, Write immediately. Rawleigh Co., Dept, OHK-348-SA, Freeport, Iil, Local Representative Wanted No Experience Needed Man who can call on farmers and sell them complete line o f products including Feeds for Livestock, Radios, Washing Machines, House and Barn Paint, Hand Tools, China W a re , Silverware, Aluminum Kitchen Ware, Aladdin Lamps and other items. No selling experience necessary. We train you in sales and service work. Farm experience or knowledge of livestock helpful. Car necessary. Large weekly com mission gives you chance to earn splendid income. Exclusive closo- to-home territory. We are 60 year old, million dollar company. Write for full information. Tell us about yourself. E. V . MOORMAN, President Dapt. 328, Quincy, 111, WANTED;—Representative to look after our magazine subscription Interests in Cedarvllle, O.. and vicinity. Our plan enables you to secure a good part of the' huiidretki of dollars spent in this vicinity each fall and winter for magazines. Oldest agency In IT. S. Guaran teed ibwest rates on. all periodicals, domestic and.foreign. Instructions and equipment free. Start a growing and permanent business in whofe or spare tpne. Address MOORE-COTT- RELL, Inc., Wfyiapd Road, North Cohocton, N. Y. Subscribe for THE HERALD I F I T I S C H E A P £ R COAL Y o n W i t h - - I H a v e I t Mined and Screened Manhattan Lump, Ohio's Best Coal. Forked at my yard and delivered at $5*00 Per Ton, C. O. D. Four tons or more $4.75 per ton delivered C* O. D, Something Better! Yes, Car just came in of Hard Burly Eastern Kentucky Coal. This is the Best and Cheapest Coal on the market at the Price. Only $6.00 Per Ton Delivered Also have in stock following High Great Coals: . Genuine- Pocahontas Lump, Yellow Jacket, Kay Jay, and best of all, Dana Block. FEED OF ALL KINDS—-W ill Trade Coal for Grain C.L.McGuIim C A S H S T O R E TELEPHONE— 3 South Miller St. Cedarville, O. U B I K 0 LIFE DIMM) FEEDS Wholesale and Retail on Tankage and Hominy ' Also Line of Middlings, Bran, Oil Meal, Soy Bean, ‘ Alfalfa Meal, Salt and Other Feeds. Always in the market for Corn, Wheat and Oats DAILY MARKET ON HOGS We quote on Cattle, Calves and Sheep NO COMMISSION CHARGE CUMMINGS & CRESWELL Phones: Yard 78—-Store 100 Cedarville, Ohio u & 's Toy Parade Thanksgiving Day Morning . . . in Dayton *** b#ter tbm ever before . . . Presenting a celossd collection of tahyUnd characters . . . dozens of ’ rand stew floats . . scores &f interestingfeatures! LINE OF MARCH: Parade forms at Montgomery County Fairgrounds . , . proceeds north on Main Street to the Monument , . turns around the Monument and returns down Main Street to the Fairgrounds, stopping a moment to leave' Santa at Rike's Toy Store. TIME: Parade leaves Fairgrounds at 10 A.M. sharp ! SEE: The biggest tittle Circus in the world', . . Old King.Cede and His Fiddlers Three . . . The little Kittens Who Lost Their Mittens , . , Cinderella and Her Prince Charming , , . Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp . . . Popeye the Sailor . . . The Giant Doodle Bug . , . Santa and His Little Elves 1 Byalltfteam...see Rike'sParade. . . startingPridayafterThanksgiving DaytseeSantamRike'sNewToyStorejustacrossthestreetfromRike's! lo c t l i For Sale— heater, good < Smith, Cedarv Fur Sale—T Mrs, Homer S % The Ladies'. will bold a mu 22, 1934. Mrs, W. W. to members of at her home o nesday afterno Mr. and Mrs -tained member; Club at their Ding. A numb: in the party. nd try re ar* er, Mr. Robert ] their guests, R< Reed, Hookstow former, as their Mr. and Mrs nounce the arr one-half pound home last Satur The Knoxvi Quartet, will gi P. Church, Wed 28 at 8 p. m. taken but no ad Rev. and Mrs. 1 Pennsylvania, st< evening enroute Ernest Hutchisoi Clifton and Old 1 will spend the i is a sister of Mi Mrs.. Maywood ter, Mrs. Williarr. a number o f inv and rook -party former on*Xenia day evening, at ' Mr. and Mrs. ' Cedarville, are a of a daughter, H< 9. Mrs. Stanfort removed to their • L. Haines’ privu town, Friday. Mrs. Lula Wat following cousins South Main stre Mrs. J. C. McMil C. K. Hunsicker Nora Baldridge, Arthur and Miss field; Mrs. Jame Mrs. J. C. Town Bull of this plact Three hUnten were placed und ing on the A. r Saturday withou gave the names George Brock a Prince and Rhod o f $10 and cost suspended, Not they were given the amount, suspended as he R E C th e a t r e ANC Banner Vau. 5“ * STI A 4 Performa Shows Stai 6:47 Followed b; Screen “READY Starting S “ FLIRTA1 A Gorgeou Starring i: and RIM 4.iH* '•«». 1 * Home, and Pet posits and C. D ferred. .Bought '. McGervey, 204 E O. Word has be coUnty o f the de Snodgrass, who < visiting in Los A 90 years of age the county most about twenty ye: Mr. O. A. Do lustrated lecture stine at Jgfcksontt has been spendin; sey county befor” sessions. 1
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=