The Cedarville Herald, Volume 58, Numbers 27-52
ft 1iJ ■l sj; }; i f 5 I i | ' i i 'it j i ''X * -lf.1 .it -Hi t i v- ; i ■M / ■f j - > CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2U,‘l935 ....-.... . ... ............ ............. ..... ■yin I I —■* THE CEDARVILLE HERALD ^•^*4il»M*^*M•*«**»♦•**f^«•*,*•'•«‘**^**, ••t****»f**»t*M *!**M‘ * * ’ »»* •* KARLII IIUUL — — — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER BlUrtKR~-N.Uoa»l editorial AMoe.; Ohio Nawapaper A moc .; Miami V»l!«y 1’rrsa Anno. Entered at the Post Office, Cedarviile, Ohio, October 31, 1887, as second class matter. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, .1935 THE CONSUMER BEGINS TO ITCH AND COMPLAIN estimates of return based on five One of the new tricks uncovered in million dollars a month were un- the New Deal potato control law is | reasonable. To add more trouble the that if a neighbor of a farmer has legislature passed legislation for knowledge that the farmer has sold vajious purposes based on this high more than five bushels of potatoes, pr estimate. Indications now point to a has not used New Deal woven sacks shortage of about twelve million for with potatoes branded, this neighbor :W ash ing to rbe^een the ? “ * ^ * wwrt f ^ ■ m " '.■ to a fine not to exceed $1,000 with . - . ^ “It was an act of God.” Such was •prison sentence. The potato law may braintruster, and PWA Admmistra- . . . . , . . f _ , r . , „ , ’ , , , __ the, report of the braintruster in- have been offered as a cure for cer- tor.,Harold Ickes, has been carried to ■ r . .. , , . .... . ' ....................... * 4 . ,-YH T 1 /V n r #\M rt I lAW W t M V M A • 1 . . v M M I >.n ^1 A 4 * .% « «« n A M M .r .A W n PV«« The fight in WPA Administer ‘S h e M a r r i e d H e r B o s s ! 99 Dictator Franklin D. The former was vestigators following the hurricane tain conditions hut to the average As we scan the city papers, sbme trade journals, read the out7oUsPldbUh:o^'on“any oid~thin7, snt1orrnJ that, swep‘ ke^ is'“nd “ 2 h °f '* !?*"* !! ^ stTT thf wiUB” nt’ i joke columns of periodicals, we find an undercurrent of senti- worthwhile or not, while Ickes wanted * londa. where World War vefferans ually break the back of every New ment that if it continues to grow with the coming months, will things «useful and essential.” As was ware ,n*amPed under Government Dealer. We once thought that pro- grcatly disturb some of our political leaders. Not SO many to ^ expected Hopkins wonLis point order8’ 11 80 that veterans hib.tion produced more bootleggers days ago we entered the shipping room of a large paper con- wJth thoDictator.I t was.Hopkins were agam asking the administration than was ever possible in any other cern about the r.oonhour wh,en some dozen" employees were tbat kiHeJJamestown's chance for In to make immediate' line A year under the potato con- hurniPg the hide Off the farmer.' These employees reside in the the new school building. In Ohio v ^ e n t of the bonus. Tim brain trol law will produce more bootleggers City, all have families, and all complain Of the high cost of food, aU)ne 102 projects amounting to 13 the experience O f than there ever was m the liquor especially meat. Without giving a thought as to what might miiijon dollars'were turned down by f erbei* Ho° 7 r >n « » Wh'l°- bu8mess- “ tbe ™ehbor is hauled be the trouble, these'men could see no where else, to put the Hopkins. *°“s,e’ de™e(l a pain °f shjppmg tbe into what 18to b,nde*;.him ff°m, flight also be pointed out that I _____ helpless veterans to the southern isle using* but one answer, to all questions' blame but on thq^farmer, in ‘ 1 1 Roosevelt NRA desti-uuwvc mci.vuv a . vw m .u —y *»«; ~ ~ heavy storms for many years. The There is a wide spread between prices paid the fanner and have a follower of the Jeffersonian reccnt storm wag of niuch „ reater this crowd of employees there was a time under NRA that', a . well known Southwestern Demo- M, af ? c. eam* The ialand isII_oa,y on ftbe witne8S 8taTld: “l don,t *now’ j lt was the modern Moses. Employees that were sold cratic publisher dropped into this a 8 me es.a ve sea eve • , a s l®Ir’ < Et str cti e ethods no find they were duped. i office last Friday. It is a delight to ™ “"c IT™. “S 1 « ----------- - Z Z T ____ A New Deal congressman down in greater •Oklahoma ^hat had much to do with 1 _ .. ................ re„ the What the consumer is forced to pay today when the average faith sit down in our sanctum and velodty than usual and several t^ e ^ " e v r i t securitTleeislation^ City employee is working only part time and must support a discuss the issues of the day, state hundred veteraria , t their lives. Cent i ^ passed it out to get family on reduced income. Whether the middle man IS taking «nd national. It u a hard pla e Thcre fa a o£ crit;cal aenti- vetaran Sern Gore of L t state who’ the lion’s share is something else but lifting the cover,there we these editors have to fi l m the heet c mcnt veteran ci , that diaturbes h ... k Jeffersonian 1 « ,d what many probably are not aware „1. today. !J S " - - * ^ ' ^ I T £ — The The middlemen is forced to take a larger percent of ; irno7anmoved They now have their truste” 80Ujrht an a,ibi on the death-Roosevelt yardstick. We are very than ever before to meet higher costs of doing business. _Most |worry ^ a is a]1 to end< Few of the veterans and the report was, much interested in a plank ;administration. There is much that 'M o s t ' ’s not aPProved. They now of this increase can be traced-directly to NRA standards, -Today wholesale houses are forced to employ men or women of mature age to do light work tha t would be »attractive to young people of fifteen or eighteen years of age. The younger set would be ’satisfied with a living wage to'get not only income but a chance to work up to a higher station. NRA forced labor unions in most houses that act as distributing plants for all kinds of mer chandise. This added greatly to the cost of doing business, and also reached down to the retailer: The manufacturer was hit with this club first under the Hugh Johnson idea of business. _... ._____ ... .. , . in his of the Democratic following in press “rt was an act of God.” But the re- platform•of share the wealth. The; ranks want to brand themselves as f,°lb .,l1ade reference^ to the fact Congressman wants to useat Senator public apologists. They cannot do this *bat *be Roosevelt administra- Gore, ^nd proposes that the next con ns one remarked.after having often hon that 8blPPad the unemployed gres.s pass a law that will give every pointed out Republican wreckless veteranK 0Ut of the capital city to get man-and woman 55 or over a pension spending .as he termed it. them out of the wny. of $30 a month, irrespective of what ___ . > ■1 ' 1 vproperty they own. This interests us «. The New Dealers have rented more hut in we hnne he rnnkes These arc not the best days for a .. . lnn l ■ ' ,n our case. " e hop® •»« maxes - - - *• than 100 expensive private ho/nes, provision for back pay. We would apartment ho.usos and hotels in Wash- have more interest in the law if these president of a school board seeking -T ,iJ ama 1 ni /1 +n n cf reaching be placed on the farmer or producer. In fact it was not so many months back that farmer and manufacturer were.in the same class, neither getting a reasonable profit for what they produced. The. urban as well as rural citizen is going to face even higher prices in the future and probably not much increase in salary will be possible. The New Deal cost of government will let loose his feelings following re- Mon jn tho mlllion dol,w handsome under of nire eet behind the lection of the solicited project of a m „ t i,„m„ „„„ , „i aa«ei oo yt.ns ot age get Denind the Tnow hnilHimr Mr Rallnrd thought ^ h P Oklahoma candidate one hundred per in Washington. The taxpayers are ceht, called'upon to pay a yearly rental of ___________ • ; ne building. r. B llar t t that Gov. Davey had copped every thing coming to Ohio when he asked ,nore than $19 000 The vnluaWo for 20 million for state buildings. This paintings and works of art have bej?n Pennsylvania voters awoke Wed- set'the water boiling in the Davery- TOV;ered" with celophane”'to "preserve !'e8<!ny mor"ing and fouad tba^ at crat tea-kettle. Other Democratic (hem> ^ ----- ---- fha ^ „ L k‘ast a Prpat majority of electors m EflCll room IT c "h I ^ ** S11 tpujwi IVJ VA v,avvvie ill take much of what labor has enjoyed in the past in the way o f ipoliticians on the Roosevelt New Deal giba' of some^fty rooms' is” orcopied th° Sti,tC S^iU had faith 111 constitu' higher prices owing to taxes with little increase possible in in- | slate felt peeved. Evidently this all wjth government‘ employees' under t,onal government. The Democratic come. Its an old adage hut still true: "The Consumer Pays it worked on Mr. - ----- all in the end.” FORCING US INTO INFLATION In a recent article, Paul Mallon, the well known Washing ton correspondent, wrote: “Thestruth is the treasury does not know what its receipts and expenditures will be next month. Its haziness about the future expands at the contemplation of each sheet on the calendar; It cannot have even a faintly worth while opinion beyond next yea r” This is in line with the theory that many thinking Ameri cans have been holding for some time:—-that federal finance is in a hopelessly chaotic condition. Forecasts as to the future revenue have no sound basis—they usually represent optimism,' rather than realism. The government continues to spend us farther into debt—and apparently hasn’t the slightest idea of nvhere the money is to come from to meet the obligations. . One inevitable result of such a policy is constantly mount ing taxes—along with new taxes. Another, and pe'rhaps more menacing possibility, is inflation. .All the tax laws in the world cannot produce revenue when personal pocketbooks and in dustrial bank balances run dry. When that happens, inflation —which can be defined as cheapening and degrading the cur rency—becomes the “easy” way out. The perils of inflation need no description—the tragic ex amples of Germany and other countries which experienced in- flationaiy periods are well known. If we are to avoid such social and economic tragedies at home, government finance must undergo a thorough overhauling, both in principle and practice. • • ■ Ballard’s con8cieiice?TufrwelL The bath rooms drnate govomor, the first the state has had for he followed with a second stater marble have even been converted into in so many years that the average •The new movie season rolls on with one big hit after another showing at the deluxe Regent the ater in Springfield, which has an nounced a week's engagement of Claudette Colbert's' new starring vehicle,- “She Married Her Boss,” beginning Friday. '. MI bs Colbrt, one of the screen’s outstanding actresses, is said to surpass all her past achievements in this new Columbia picture in which she is supported - by such stars as Michael Bartlett, Melvin Doughlas and others. The story— a timely and modern one-r-has to do with a business girl who didn’t have time •for love. , Many theatergoers in tliis sec tion are attending Springfield the aters each ■week where they are enjoying the latest hits in th& comfort amt •beautiful atmosphere of deluxe city, theaters, Perform ances in the .Springfield class “A theaters are continued from noon to midnight each day. A special shoppers’ matinee is offered daily excepting Saturdays' and Sundays with adults admitted from 12 to 1 P. M. for J5c, The State theater, in Springfield, Will show the new Paramount hit, “Annapolis Farewell” four days, starting Saturday. ■The S t a t e shows a special prevue of its week end attraction each Friday night ®t an “Owl Show,” patrons enjoying the last performance of the picture closing on Friday and the special prevue of Saturday’s attraction for one admission price. ^ ^ _ . u i u i c u e iv x : v v t r u u v tr.il u m v n w , ' U l f i t u „ v . , , i ■ i • * ment exonerating Gov. Davey ami officM for jhe stcnographel-s. what ^ ,andpa. has look up > is history assuming all responsibility for a ......i.« . . . „ «, * . became inoculated with that brand of a would' the late John R. MC] statement in haste. Now that Frank-' noted Ohio Democratic publisher/ fol- Com™uni«" ------- lm D. backs Administrator Hopkins, lffwr of Jeffer80Ilf say if he shou|d the New Dea1' or Russian Common who killed the Jamcstlown hchool u,-., ------ . . . . nla<le over to suit this nation. It * arise from his grave and find that m-oiect it 'looks like 'Mr Ballard is. ! , _ ■ . almost, certain that the piujecv, u, iwab Jiae Da,ldlu “ what was once his proud Democratic in Washington known as ism was New Deal would appeal to the electorate which due for another statement admitting party was using prope,ty in the Me- . . . that he reconsidered and retracted his Lcan n^ n 0 for Communistic' Mead- * ould order a change in the constitu- r-econd statement a bit ahead of time ,.tl!lrlers <iurjl)g the Rof)seveit r0*0]u ‘,on to confo.-m with the Rooseve t with Hopkins in the saddle. By this tion ? ' brand of Communism. *The New Deal time Mr. Ballard will have found out that the Roosevelt brain-trusters wear the coat of many colors. Madison county is one of the busiest counties in Ohio, irrespective of size. Business is always good in many ers have no more use for a constitu tion,'unless it has plenty of rubber in it, than they have for the King James version of the Bible. • Huey Long is dead ‘now so that Washington will hear little quoted from the Bible. ~ ’ more New I)cnl. Make Our Market Your Market AN IMPORTANT BIRTHDAY—TUESDAY ■ One hundred and forty-eight years ago, Tuesday, was signed after months of deliberation the greatest document in the history of civilized man dealing with government—the Con stitution of the United States. At no period in the history of the country have we .celebrated a day that should, mean more than what took place on .September 17, 1787. This document did not come from anyone sect or political party, but was laid as^the foundation of a government, unlike any that had ever existed in world histb^=wherein a people seeking freedom could bind themselves together as a republic. The new America of that day had experienced all it wanted in the way of op pressive rule by the hand of a dictator from across the sea. For nearly one hundred and fifty years this nation has con tinued to grow and expand in all lines of individual endeavor after having thrown off the yoke of dictatorship and regimenta tion enforced by an English King. Over this long period no president has ever dared to undermine the constitution or 'breakdown the statues that gave it support until we entered the era of the New Deal. It is the first time that private irtdustry has been bound and gagged by the act of theorists, not one of which had even had the opportunity of gaining a mark of in- . dividual success. Having bee.n regimented under the direction , of the so-called braintruster business finds itself operating as best it can under the direction of a walking delegate of some union that would outlaw individual initiative. One of the burdens of the people, of the new America, was that of taxation—“without representation.” The constitution that fifty-live representatives of the various states 'wrote as tho framework of the government was to ho the guarantee that taxation could only be what the people were willing to- hear. On this Tuesday birthday we find ourselves laboring under the greatest national debt ever know and the constitutional rights of the people thrown to the four winds by a dicatorial set known as the New Dealers that refuse to be hound by constitutional law, or even give respect for the United States Supreme Court, j This defiance is a sad reflection on Thomas Jefferson, who ! pointed out at the time of the writing of the constitution that | “it is not by the consolidation or concentration of powers, h u t ! their distribution (to the various states) that government is i affected.” ' ’ ! This being a government of political parties and Jefferson ' being the oft quoted idol of the party in power and responsible 1 for our present plight, we wish to quote the following from his. pen on this anniversary date celebrated this week: “When all government, domestic amd foreign, in little as in great things, shall be drawn to Washington as the center of all powers, it will render powerless the checks provided of one ! government on another and will become -as venal and oppres-; sive as the government from .which it separated. If the states , look with apathy on this silent descent of their government into the gulf which is to swallow all, We have only to weep over tlie ., humane character found uncontrollable but by a rod of iron ,! and the blasphemers as incapable of-self-government become his true historians/' ( ■ A Columbus court -last week enjoin- lines in that county, doctors, under- ed State Purchasing Agent Thomas lakers, ambulance owners, attorneys ”™r . 1,11,11 (lu®^« iro™ lne ° from letting a contract for sales tax with auto damage cases, courts and Np""8^ ""i"'" 3™' Tuesday n° ! stamps to two different firms on bids the county coroner, all have unusual higher than that of a third firm. The business. Since January 1st this judge in no uncertain language scored year there have been 26 deaths due to the method of contract letting, Oruv fatal automobile accidents. Madison of the greatest faults of the 'Sales county is'traversed by several import- tax has been the management of the ant federal and state highways, method of collection. From the start especially Nos. 40 and 42 as well as every class of politician that wanted 2D. The highways are in good condi- a job was taken care of regardless of tion, The trouble is not with bridges, qualification. ' It was the chance of Cross roads are plainly marked. All a Roman holiday for Democratic the trouble lies with the motor car or politicians. The State Tax CommiH- truck driver. We have no record of sion has been the -subject o f . much the number injured so far this year, merited criticism, all of which has yet the record Sunday last was one tended to breakdown moral support killed and five injured, some serious- of the sales tax, From ' the tilurl i.v Ihat may yet loose their lives, ----- !W|i.W»!»J J ■■ J,'I'MJIJ.J.iuJOJJLWJUa. -l ,!L! SPRINGFIELD LIVESTOCK SALES COMPANY Sherman Aye. Main 335-J SPRINGFIELD, OHIO JL COAL NOTES Strike of Coal Miners, Monday Morning, September 16th, Unless an Agreement is Reached Before That Time, Between Miners and Operators In either case, there will .be an advance Jn coal prices. If miners strike, production stops, causing shortage. If operators grant only part-of miners demands,' cost o f production will be increased, which means advance in price of coal. I have a large supply of following coals in yard: Per Ton Delivered JACKSON LUMP, OHIO’S BEST COAL ........ $5.25 PIONEER ISLAND CREEK LUMP, W. Va. .... ■. 5.50 DANA BLOCK LtlMP, W. Va....................... ........ 6.50 . SEMI-POCAHONTAS LUMP ................. 6.25 GENUINE POCAHONTAS LUMP ,....................: 6.75 Genuine'POC- LUMP, treated for dust .............. 7.00 rders placed now at these prices will save you money. CALL OR SEE ME C.L.McGiunn TELEPHONE—3 South'Miller St. Cedarviile, O. ' l : -r : , f", The man who holds the throttle—theflag man who “gives *em the red rag”—people all over the country enjoy Chesterfields . One reason is Chest* erfields are milder— mildness that smokers like. Another reason is they taste better—a pleasing taste and flavor that smokers like. 1 *' From cab to caboose . . . from Main Street to Broadway . . they get ah O, K. H 193), Liccm k Mvm T obacco C o , *r Local Miss Flori* turned homt* with friend:. Miss Pram bus, formerly with friend* Misses Els Tindall, who summer at 1 had employrm Mrs. Harry Mps. Lina Mi man, O., Thui McCullough w Mrs, Wullai Woman’s Mi.s Clifton Unite Wednesday at _ tilts Mr. W. R i UtU Friday after fS, P foot while ai •Id cla Mr. Watt is * tl fro* . < • £ at the Allenti A iifferei ■-*... and ' Mr. and Mi • from several day*■ friends and i Sprl Handcock cou iramoi gan. four The Miss Martin ? of it ing with her n •iday ona e , has returned if the wliere she tea- 3 tlie ers' College. attract Probate Jud thorized Carv $475 as' settlei sustained by . from Mrs. Cf formerly of th Mrs. Florenc pointed admini her husband, t The appraiser* dock, R. S. To\ mings. Mr. and 5 daughter, Mr have been spot ville, N. C., i t’ Mr. and Mr Lucy Barber 1 who mortored are expected !; :oal lortaj Is, ci tdvai The Clifton celebrated, a I day. A histoi ed in *1811 wa: ■Whitey Rev. Dayton, forme ciple address, rendered by a Corry a t the c number of for sent for the acquaintances. r d : Ton 1) ...$5,1 .5 .! . . . 6 ! 6.1 . 6 / 7. you Funeral ser eight-year-old > Mrs. Ross Wis* night, was com nesday at hei Kyle Road, f> Cedarviile, wit also leaves be sister, Coven;. August, Clayl ' Carl at home was conducts pastor of the • SPR II Don't 1 Ml»« Itl
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