The Cedarville Herald, Volume 58, Numbers 27-52

CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15,1055 T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D ! ^ ™ = s KABLIl BULL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JnEWMb-NiUawI Sdtlatlsl Ohio Nswsyspor A*VK. UltBl V»Uey Pros* AMOO. En tered at the P ost O ffice, C edarville, Ohio, O ctober S I, 1887, m second class matter, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18,1885 ANOTHER FOOLISH TAX PROPOSAL A special committee of the legislature to study the tax sit­ uation proposes that Ohio authorize .a public corporation to is­ sue $20,000,000 in bonds for poor relief. This step is nothing ' more than loading the credit o f the state beyond an amount that could be considered safe or within reason. There is but one reason for such a proposition and that is it would be used for political purposes and force the state as a whole to carry the relief load that has been built purposely by politicians in the larger cities* If there is anyone thing that needs to have the public strings tightened on, it is the so-called relief. The whole nation under a spendthrift administration in Washington and Ohio with other states has done nothing more, than break down the self responsibility, respect and moral of millions of people, No one can deny but that a certain amount of relief has been neces­ sary but this shouldrhave been left with each township and each city. The federahgpvmmment has squandered enough in overhead in the way of salarie^to politicians to man the relief political machine to pay for the ordinary demands in the way of relief. The harvest of what has beWihwn in the past is best told in the strike of relief workers in New York City where they ' refuse to accept $93.50 a month for 130 hours work. There "has been a call for labor in factory and on the farm, yet thousands have refused to work, knowing that Santa Claus still lives and will come around each week with $14 to $17weekly for doing nothing. However' such sums were never offered in rural counties where thousands of farm tenant families were told to live as best they could on one, two or three dollars a week. Had it not been for the aid given these families by farmers thou­ sands of children would have found a starvation grave. Every rural county in Ohio should rise up in arms against this monstrous grab to issue .bonds'to the amount of twenty mil­ lion dollars in Ohio. It is not necessary if the Roosevelt pros- ' perity is what the administration would have you believe. It is unfair to each rural county that will get' little or nothing in return. Such a.sum is .for the benefit of the cities that in the past have coaxed farm* labor within its borders on the pretext of high wages. The cities have invited what they now face, so we say let each city care for its own relief. In prosperous times the city took all that labor secured in the way of wages. But today the state is to be asked to pay the bill. There is not a property owner in a rural county, nor even those that have been on relief, that should sanction tins proposal. -The property owner has had to take reduced rents-or no rent at all. Those on relief in the rural counties have been considered serfs by the powets in Washington and Columbus. This class has not been treated fair1with those in the city. Register your protest against this $20,000,000 grab when it comes up in the legislature:, A former Ced&rvillian who left the community seventeen years-ago,.’^ays the feeling in thn. south against 'the northemor is not much different now than then. Being located in Alabama he has opportunity o f getting full benefit of "southern atmosphere.1’ It makes no difference where you go or what you do you are still a “ yankee, le says many has been the time when he entered the polls to cast his vote he was termed as northerners are frequently called, "Follywogs." The old time southerner never trusts the northerner, even in church. Political­ ly the northerner has no rights from the southern viewpoint. We are getting a taste o f that in Washington with southern Democracy in power. The South is safely conservative from the Democratic standpoint and does not take kindly to consersion o f Jef-' fersonian principles to Communism u)nder Roosevelt hut ’(the latter sweetens the situation by pouring hundreds o f millions o f dollars for good or had into a section with the hint, "take it anyway, the north is paying the bill.” There is not enough federal revenue, in any form collect­ ed south o f the Mason and Dixon line to run the government one week under, the spendthrifts in Washington. Of HOW QUICK WE CAN CHANGE OUR MIND After repeated threats by Roosevelt that if congress passed any pension legislation he would veto it, the nation was startled Wednesday to learn that the King had once more changed his mind and signed a bill that Will restore pension cuts to Spanish War veterans, and their widows. Similar threats were made against payment Of the bonus bill to World War veterans but the House not only voted for it but refused to sustain the Roose­ velt veto; The bill died as the Senate sustained the veto. One o f the issues of the campaign last week in Rhode Island was payment of the bonus and^Communism in the adjriinistration at Washington. This probably caused the' King to change his mind once more. It is also plainly shown that neither his threats or his promises can be taken seriously. '*• THE OHIO PRIMARY ELECTIONS While there were only a limited number of primary elec­ tions in Ohio for 'municipal offices we find indications of some political drift in the state. In Dayton, a steong Demo­ cratic city, a socialist leads all the candidates for city^Commis sioner. The next highest were two Republicans, and a Demo­ crat, trailing, for*the four places. v Another point of the wind direction is the defeat of the many bond issues before the voters that tqxing districts coulc get a slice of the Roosevelt corruption fund. Some of the strongest Democratic counties arid municipalities voted against these bond issues as nigh as six to one. In the list were Dayton, Portsmouth, Marion, Marietta, Lancaster, and Sidney.: It ap­ pears the Democrats must do some missipnary work to back Roosevelt policies of more debt for more prosperity. FINANCIAL STATEMENT -—of. the— Cedarville Building & Loan •Association Showing the condition of the association* at'the close of business, June 30, 1935. ASSETS LIABILITIES ’ Cash on hand and in banks $ 8412.86 Deposits and accrued Bonds —- ............................... 12650.00 interest .................— $ 8238.00 Loans on 'mortgage security 10308.91 Contingent profits — ■' 826.17 Outstanding check bn t 86.97 Exchange Bank 15.00 14067.04 Running stock, dividends * 103170.48 5857.69 Paid-up stock, dividend ... ’ 26535.00 6881.14 Reserve, fund 5934.00 ———-—- Undivided profit fund . . . . 6221,96 course the north is paying the bill. Three years ago in May we heard a southern publisher wax eloquent, as a Rotarian can, in responding to an address in Indianapolis, over the pro­ spects of the nation. Re drew a word picture o f how a cripple had just been enthroned to lead a nation o f one 125,000,000 people out of the depression to a land of promise, milk and honey, It was one of the most beautiful tributes that we had ever heard conferred on any citizen. We haye discovered that even the most loyal southerner can change his mind; This same publisher that had entranced his hearers at Indianapolis, addressed another similar' group in Columbus last January. Two years o f trial o f the modem Moses that had gone brain-truster 'had convinced the southern publisher' that the "cripple" had strayed from the straight and narrow to a detour that ao man even knew where it wduld lead. By this time the AAA had come to birth, from where no one knew, just like, Topsey o f "Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” it just grew. With it came the plowing up o f every third r o w 'o f cotton and birth control o f Mrs. Sow in the barn lot. The south­ ern. publisher, owned 1,200 acres o f fine cotton land irt a high ,state of cultivation, not the cropper brand o f farm. Now he has a couple crops of cotton and cannot sell it for there is no market. The price is even lower this year than last. The government under the leadership-of'whom many thought Was, Mosses has hundreds of millions loaned on cotton in storage, two crops. The foreign market is closed to American cotton. The south­ erner still has; his cotton and also his "Moses," but he .is no longer painting word pictures o f the Demo­ cratic heaven he. once saw in the mist of the sky. Even .Webster docs not sanction the use o f adjectives, ad­ verbs, Cut-up phrases and,, swear­ words that have supplanted all that was beautiful in the Indianapolis after-dinner speech . "In your opinion da you think the present program of the administration will overcome the depressionI " “ I would say no, certainly not. We and our children and grand children have more ahead o f us than we have experienced in this depression. Debt put us where we are and the debt of billionB that Roosevelt is piling up will sink us deeper. Hoover put us in the bole and Roosevelt is only weighting us down. His brain- trusters baye been a curse to the country. “In your opinion who is the most logical candidate for, president, Re* publican or Democratic?" "O f course the Democrats will nominate Roosevelt for a second term. Political parties have a habit o f re* nominating officials;-.right or wrong. One the Republican side Borah is out* standing and his age would be held against Mm but next would come Gov. Langdon o f Kansas. The ’‘ Re­ publicans could not do better but the politicians might not want him." “In your opinion what has been Roosevelt’s greatest-weakness?" “ I have voted for twelve Democrat candidates for president in jny time, any one o f whom would have exempli­ fied a higher moral example in the White house than has Roosevelt.. His views on liquor, divorce "as well as other issues have not been commend­ able towards upholding Christian citizenship and the Democratic party will in the end pdy a high price for betraying Christian ideals.” * “In view o f all that you have said Roosevelt will not likely get your support, then who?” "Borah and Langdon would make a great Iteam.” dividuals that was nil right, but whan federal money is used for the benefit o f the millionaire Astor family in New York to erect tenement quarters on a big scale, the King cries aloud for police protection. The whole story is the King must repay the millionaire Astor for joy rides pn his water palace. The Sherrill survey committee rec­ ommended a reduction o f one million dollars in the operation o f the State Tax Commission for the collection-of sales taxes alone. Carlton S. Dar- gusch', brain-truster of the Tax Com­ mission says a reduction is impossible and takes a flng at Col.. Sherrill, What Ohio needs is Col. Sherrill as governor. One thing is certain there would be few o f the Dargusch stripe politician heading any board o r com­ mission, Col, Sherrill showed Cincin­ nati that he could manage the city without political aid for less money than the taxpayers had been paying. Under the Dargusch mtllion-dollar collection system, Cedarville received the wonderful suift o f $11.95, as the village’s share o f the July tax collec­ tion; CONTINUED RAINS HAVE GREATLY DAMAGED WHEAT With rain almost each day or night this week farmers that have itot yet threshed or combined their wheat and oats stand to loose much. We are informed that not only has the quality been reduced for milling pur­ poses but also for stock feed. FREE Talking Picture Show On the Streets o f Cedarville NEXT THURSDAY EVE. And Every Week "Thereafter COME AND TELL YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS An hour and a half o f good" pictures and music. A Comedy -—Educational Feature adn Main Feature. ALL FREE COLUMBUS ATTORNEY OWN BIG TOM JOHNSON FARM, The geographical location o f a city or town has much to do with the a- mpunt of .money that can be drawn from Uncle Sam’s till under the Roosevelt share the wealthpoverty plain in spending the five billion. It is generally supposed that each com­ munity shall put up at least' 45 per cent o f the cost o f certain projects. At least this applies to northern states that are not on the preferred lis that exists south o f the Mason and- Dixon line, ' Georga has a gov­ ernor that belongs to the Democratic party, strictly Jeffersonian. Ho is not and has not been in sympathy with the- Roosevelt-Communistic party holding the balance of power. At­ lanta, Ga,, had a certain project the city wanted financed—by the-govern­ ment. The Roosevelt spenders were at first loath to give an ear due to the stand that Gov. Talmadge has taken. Atlanta knows her politics and how to play the game.. The city wanted ten million dollars for the im­ provement; with no notes, percentage gifts or anything else. It was either come clean or we will bosk Talmidge* To help kill a Roosevelt opponent politically, the Roosevelt .administra­ tion agrees to pay nine million down at once if the city raised the other million. Northern cities must dig down for 45 per cent, Atlanta only 10 per cent. If Ohio had a governor like Gov. Talmidge our towns- and cities probably would not have to finance under the 45 per cent basis, Edward C. Turner, Columbus, for­ mer attorney general of Ohio, this week purchased the 1350 acre farm on the Columbus pike, Franklin Co., owned by Thomas Johnson, one time coal' magnet. The consideration is placed at $140,000 cash and the new owner will assume . a $60,000 mort­ gage held by an insurance company. The farm has been noted for it fine stock for years and has wonderful improvements with a palatial resi­ dence. Mr. Turner purchased the farm for investment and will reside on the farm and continue the practice of law in Columbus. He has purchased much real estate in Columbus the past few months, which with the farm will represent more than $500,000. ■ t Due from borrowers for insurance and taxes __ Other real estate owned Real estate sold on contract Accounts receivable — - — TO TA L .............. $150940.61 due, uncollected. „ 3046.22 Interest -^ . 2 TO TA L -------— $160940.61 STATE o f OHIO, Greene County, ss. I. C. Davis, being duly sworn deposes and says that he is the Secretary o f The Cedarville Building & Loan Associa­ tion of Cedarville, Ohio, and that to the best o f his knowledge and belief the foregoing is a true statement and correctly shows the financial condition o f said Company at the close of business on the thirtieth day of June, A* D. 1935, I. C. DAVIS, Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 19th day of February, A. D. 1935, A., E« Richards, Notary Public, Greene Co., Ohio, CERTIFICATE OF AUDITING COMMITTEE OR THREE DIRECTORS .We, the undersigned. Directors of the said The Cedarville Building & Lonp Association of Cedarville, Ohio, do hereby, certify that the foregoing, to the best o f our knowledge and belief, is a frtie statement and correctly shows the financial condition o f said Company at the close o f fiscal year ended on the Mat day o f January, A. D. 1934. W. A, Spencer A. E, Huey J. W. Ros£ MAKE OUR MARKET YOUR MARKET V ■ * . * . AUCTION SALE EVERY MONDAY a S p Sherman field Live Stock Sales Co* Phono; Main *35*J Springfield,' Ohio A Jefferson Twp. Democratic farm­ er does not think much o f what is going on in Washington under what he once said was his party adminis­ tration. He sums up the situation by saying: "Two years from now Roose velt will be as dead politically as is Hoover," "But what about the five billion for campaign purposes ? ” was our quiry?” “Rhode Island has shown more courage in voting down public bribery o f the electorate than ail the rest o f the states in the Union,” .was his reply, “ What is your idea o f the process­ ing taxes?” twas the question we di­ rected. To which he replied: “ More vote buying, nothing else, all o f which will in the end cost the average farm­ er five dollars for each dollar receiv­ ed now as ’ rent'." “In. what way?" “ The cost of doing business will be so increased, cost o f manufacture Of not only farm machinery, under pro­ posed tax for corporations, as well as all commodities, will force prices so high, that income-from farms will not justify," “ Then you think farm; income will not increase along with increased prices for all the farmer must pur­ chase?" “My answer to that is you will next hear much of the high cost o f living as we did back about 1923. Prices o f'fa rm product's were forced down, breaking the farmer, because he had to purchase with reduced income in a high priced market." J ' “ Tinder present Conditions asid your experience as a successful farm­ er would you advise investment to­ day in farm land?" ' “ If for profit from crops, I say no, If for safe investment I would say yes. Men o f wealth are only in­ vesting in farm land for the reason that government bonds today hava a questionable value and very low rate o f interest," . When death called Charles Truax, Democrat congressman-at-large from Ohio last week, both state and nation­ al' Democratic administrations found themselves in a complex'mixup. Bad feeling has existed for many months between Roosevelt forces and the Davey administration. The great power of Democratic Washington has been used to crush the Davey brand of Ohio Democracy.. Both sides face the question o f whether it is feasible to call a special election to nominate and elect .a successor. With the Rhode Island result fresh in mind it is certain Washington doei not want a test vote. It will be recalled that Roosevelt refused to appoint Cong. Hr.rland to a federal judgship for the reason that Democratic leaders in the Third (Dayton) District were certain a Democrat could not be elected. Now the big club that Roosevelt cut to have Harry Hopkins use on Davey is in the hands o f the Governor, That Davey will moke Roosevelt eat out of his hand there is no question, Its either that or Davey will call for a special election in the state, Davey is vindicative and does not forget per­ sonal grudges, so its a case o f our King getting-on his knees to Ohio’s governor. It is a good *guess that Davey can have anything he wants from now on and here is’ where the George White branch o f Ohio Demo­ cracy is to be out on the end o f a limb, If Roosevelt should refuse Davey de­ mands, then we will have the elec­ tion, and according to Democratic ad­ mission, A Republican will succeed to the unexpjred term o f Mr* Truax. FLEET-WING Did You Know TH AT :— Our “ Golden Motor" is a New and Greater Gasoline? The Manufacturer Specifies Certified Lubrication? We Carry a Complete Line o f U. S, Tires, U. S. L. Batteries, Champion Spark Plugs, and Accessories? . WE ARE FULLY EQUIPPED TO RENDER THESE SERVICES Our Aim Is To Give You Quick Service and Courteous Treatment. WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE THEOHIOINDEPENDENTOILCO; Phone 68 Bob Huffman and Ralph Fitzwater,Mgrs. > Cedarville, Ohio. Xenla, Ave. Home and Peoples Bldg., Aaso. De­ posits snd C. Da and H. and A . Pre­ ferred. -Bought and Sold. Wm. McGcrvcy, 204 E* Second St., Xenia, O. 1 pFORSALEANDWANTADSPAYBIG One has to smile tinder his sleeve when he reads that our King through some of his puppets asks for 300 policemen to guard a housing project in city because relief workers want straight union wages and have gone on a strike. The King, who hss toyed with union racketeers in the past, now wants policemen to guard a building from damage, that he re­ fused individuals or corporations that had labor trouble, Cleveland at pre­ sent has numerous strikes and there has been much property damage, yet the owners have not nor could they get protection, let alone sympathy from the Roosevelt-Communistic ad* ministration. M long as uniojn lead­ ers were raiding what betonged, to in* lajayali■pp y v cag sa M’TlHiPlayiraaadeflheCf—f lakes"-JwielSlalept.t EVBYIMJOYMBfr AWAITSYOtt-HAPPMISSAW MAiTMMM RMN SWMHH Largest Hotels on tho-Graat Lakes, 1000 cool# outside rooms, at mod­ erate rates. Finest Bathing Beach in the world, so gradual In slope; a child con enjoy It In safety. There’s Fishing, Golf,Tennis, Dancing..# endless attractions fo r young and old. Our Midway Is filled yrith the latest, dean , modem, enticing novelties. Moderately priced, appe­ tizing meals,as formal or informa Ias you desire,even to PIcntcGrounds. 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