The Cedarville Herald, Volume 60, Numbers 1-26
«,!- ..." I'" ’"' c » i s ? ^ m ^ ^ F i t g u t , $ 0 $ i l i i t f m U m r s r r a im THE CEDARVILLE HERALD MAlEf.W BULL — — — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER MMirWt «W* X «w M «r A *w .s M bs* VaHw f*w » AW**, | M 1 *t (A* F$*fcOffics, Cedarville, Ohio, October SI, 1887, M i Ionfind cltH / *• p> wfp ^^ irw gpWNWFywYMrw- FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 19S7 TOO WILL PAY UNION WAGE INCREASE When John I* Lewis made an unholy alliance with Ropae- aad Farley, both made it possible to use the government as anrinstrument to not only crush email business, but to enable big velt business to put its hand into the pocjcetbook o f every consumer, rich and poor. * Reports indicate Roosevelt as much surprised at the quick settlement o f the auto strike and the signing up o f steel manu facturers with union leaders without a contest as was Lewis himself. Rig business was well aware o f the crooked deal be tween Roosevelt, Farley and Lewis for the union vote last fall. Business knew that Roosevelt was using his executive power to back Lewis, even if ft was necessary to use the regular army to protect the sit-down strikers. Business leaders may have shown the white feather but in the end they will win. Already many large companies have accepted the union backed by Lewis. This was true of the steele people and this week new prices go into effect that will add $8.25 a ton to all steel, whether it iB railroad iron, structural steel, sheet steel for automobiles or metal used in farm machinery, roofing nails, wire fence, stovfes, etc. There is no class o f citizens that will be hit as hard and pay as high per centage o f the increase as the American farmer. The average city chap will pay directly only in one way and that is in the purchase o f an automobile. Just how union labor will be satisfied is also a question. The hourly wage rate has been increased but the hours per week have been reduced to forty. By this the steel worker will not draw as much per week o f five days as he did under the old scale. The new plan will be the means o f adding several thousand new steel workers, if experienced men can be found. Steel manufacturers say there is a scarcity o f experienced men and it takes three years experience to hold a place of respon sibility in the handling o f hot metal. Moreover, the average American born citizen cannot stand the heat in the steel mills / and it is this work where the pay is best. The foreigner will take the cream o f the wages. The Roosevelt-Lewis hold up of the American consumers will not last long. The consumer will soon learn that it is he who will pay the election obligation. I f is the old story of the “ fool and his money soon parted/’ Thesteel manufacturers as sumed the roll o f the wise men, met all demands of the Roose- velt-Lewis- union crowd and passed the increased cost o f manu facture on to you, Mr. Consumer, “ the forgotten man." TIME MARCHES ON — As thk i» written, March, tjie first spring month, is with us, leaving two months o f tbe year 1937 behind. March is the mark- er of seasons and this year it leads us to*an early Easter. Not all sections of the country will get to breathe the first breath of spring with the advent of a neWmottth.-Joy be Withthose whp can have Spring’s early blessing. The rest o f us will patiently await what is in store for us. FLORIDA CITRUS CROP GOING TO WASTE Much o f the largest orange and grapefruit crop in history will go to waste i f the orders o f Secretary Wallace are followed, is the prediction o f the, smaller independent growers. So serious is the situation that a meeting was recently held at Lakeland, Florida, to demand a larger shipment each week than has been permitted by Secretary o f Agriculture Wallace, who is dictator as to how much o f the crop can leave the state each week. Pro ducers and packers say it will take ten months or more to move the 1936 crop that is now being picked. Trees are now*in full bloom for the 1937 crop. Shippers have waged unsuccessful court fights against Wallace and the New Deal method o f crop control.. There are several million bushels o f oranges and grapefruit yet to be picked and the ground under the trees is covered with ripe fruit that would be welcomed in any home in the North. There are roadside stands and city stands every few miles and wherever you go you face great quantities o f the different kinds or fruit. Grapefruit o f choice selection, pick, it yourself, can be had a t 26c to 36c a bushel., Compare these Florida retail prices with ’Whetyou are compelled to pay in your city. A packer, last Friday stated to the writer that the citrus fruit business had become as much o f a racket under govern ment control aS the booze business was under AI Capone. He says the large chain stores have the edge on both producer and packer unless you belong to the ring that controls the business. , At every orchard there is a road side stand where the grow er is doing his best to sell all he Can rather than let the poli ticians in Washington say how much he can ship any one week and then have the price fixed by a group of large, buyers. As you drive over the state, you meet hundreds o f huge truck loads o f fruit that has become over-ripe for shipping and is all but given to the canner. We witnessed one young orchard where the owner had covered the ground with s nail and over-ripe grapefruit.to be used as a fertilizer and in the decaying process supply some moisture to the sandy soil. The Roosevelt-Wallace program o f waste is no different in the North than in the South. Millions are reported hungry. You are asked to support your Red Cross to care for starving, yet we face each day a program o f the most damnable waste in a year o f plenty, when the unfortunate could be aided at small cost. The North is forced to pay high prices for citrus fruits while the southern producer is told how much he can ship a week regardless o f either quality or the quantity of the crop. Mother Nature has placed in his care as his reward for a season’s labor. THE CONFIDENT-COURAGEOUS LIFE Every day the news dispatches convey the stories of men and women who have lost their grip. These suicides have not been confident o f their ability to eventually overcome their handicaps or difficulties. One o f our readers recently wrote and asked how he could attain the confident-courageous attitude toward life. He also wished to know how he could gain more personal power, The receipe is simple although a thousand pages would not exhaust a detailed elaboration. The difficulty comes in follow* lug it. • Having confidence in one’s source is often an aid to gain ing confidence in one’s powers. The finest flowering of many religious systems Of thought is the idea that the sottl of rpan is o f the same essence as the Infinite Creator. Those who need to gain confidence in-their inherent powers would do well to ih ink o f this several times a day. They should read, all they can supporing this idea. / , When they have firmly fixed in the mind who and what they are they will very often find that the clinging, fearful pro* and semi-pros. Homo talent is suit to “Southern Democracy,'* We visitors want to see. One hear* some evasion, yet she remarked that not mewing with the approval of many take a few quotations, “ But Sherman'funny remarks in the crowds which i,o^eveit caa POilsttta- oily people and the New Deal is irtv was not just a Northern General, he porting xorfugn taient taat can do the jwas a Northern Savage, inflicting un- “Hula-Hula" and Ceotehte” dances 'told hardships and unnecessary suffer- with eifly Imaginary attire. No more ing. General Lee was warrior,, not horse and boggy dancers for the New 'a savage. The wounds of differences Deal. are healing slowly enough by the passing of time, why rub salt into an SOCIETY — Senator Joe Guffey, Pld wound, keeping it fresh and bleed- Demoerat, Pennsylvania, New Deal ing? Why commemorate a brute mouthpiece end 100 per cent sponsor when there ane hundred* of real men, f Union Labor laws, is visiting down of the North as well as the South here in Miami with Earl. F. Reed, who yet are unhonored?” So, you noted attorney for steel interests and sons and daughters of Civl War the lawyer who argued against New Democrats from the North' now know Deal laws for J. and L. Steel Cor-(something about the feeling that poratjon, Pittsburgh. Guffey is quat-.must haxe existed back ia the sixties. '.T_u i i . _:,i __ GEORGIAN SPEAKS — Senator George of Georgia lets loose a dam aging charge against Roosevelt. He says Roosevelt has repudiated, loyal Democrats on hia stand for social and economic problems. Senator Cope- and, Democrat, New/ York, charges reshaping our institutions by usrpa- tion.” Roosevelt, four years ago, said, “What the nation feared most was FEAR and it should and would banish it.” What the Democratic party fears most today is Roosevelt and what he will do to the party for the future. These Democratic leaders have, more than that to fear. The problem of the future will be what the younger gen erations will do and say. It might not be a pleasant day for some of the children of the fathers of today. Bitter hatred may be expressed against one of any family that was tagged With a New Deal label. Government debtand taxes will fall on coming generation*;* Dorinot'"’forget inhat’ .happened in Greene County in the Civil Wa^ Bufi ties. Remember, family as welt as religious ties were broken. Even re ligious .denominations were divided ovter incidents of the war. More than one daughter was ( refused marriage to a son of a Democrat rebel in those days. History always has repeated itself and it probably will do so again; Even a New Deal brain truster canpot write the history of tomorrow. BRIBING JUDGES — The Demo vatic congress has been on the spot ever Roosevelt’FP^n to get control of the Supreme Ctn&t. Congress wants harmony most of all. Only a cw dare brave, the White House Fifth Avenue Socialite. FEAR among con- gi^ssmen goes beyond any fear the public had. A law was passed to bribe the high court judges by offering $20, COO salaries for. life to give up their obs. Roosevelt's ided of dealing with l.is fcllowmen is about on a par with AI Capone. It -has been said and nink truthfully, that Roosevelt's, idea of control of the-people was intmtica- tion for on®class and the dole-of some form froih* relief or lhe AAATfor all he he had no fear of the others*. ed as saying his coal hill will pass 'which means higher wages for coa. miners and higher priced coal. You can picture. Guffey down here in the society of Royal Economists, but a home and in Washington shedding tears for the “forgotten man.” Wc are a simple minded people after all. PROHIBITION — March of Time hoto news- reel shows progress of liquor Industry since repeal and then goes into program of the dry* to again seek repeal. Much discussion of repeal in Florida and ' a lot of sore ness among liberals who are dissatis fied with both quality and price. Uncle Yet the “Great White Father” son of the North, continues to pour millions upon millions o f revenue collected from northern states for any fantastic enterprise the South wants. On the basis of collection, of federal reve nue, the government collects $5.00 in the North to $1.00 in the South and pends down here in about the re verse proportion. gather. On® woman thought that Al tion to peck the Bupoems Court, then must have been such a bad fellow. Capone could just de what He lived a few years too soon. He he did oy any day laborer would be dealt in liquor and now we have liquor justified in defying any eewrt wrier, forced upon us through a New Deal The lady evidently resided in ,North dministration whether we want it or ’ Carolina because she complimented pot. She could see little difference Dan Rifer, Secretary of Commerce ,etween legal liquor and illegal liquor, for branding sit-down strikes on the While not upholding Capone for what same ground and for the same reason he had done, serving time not for Roosevelt wants to pack the ' liquor violation but for income tax Court. Dr. Townsend of $200 a month pension fame, has been found guilty of walking out on a New Deal Con gressional Committee. This is where he made a mistake. He should have haaa “ sit-down strike,” and stayed Sam has more than 4,000 men trying in the room. Elderly men are being to catch the bootleggers and says he prevented from standing at the bar averages 300 illegal stills seized ean. of justice. Osier, British brain-trust- month, yet fifty per cent o f the liquor r wanted men “gassed” at 60, Roose- onsumed in the nation today is rot- velt gives them 10 years'to give them en bootleg. Today on a public street the benefit of mental punishment, a score of seized automobiles were sold Here in Miami they have had for by the government at prices around years, a dub of honored professional $25 each. Liquor runners'buy them and businessmen. It is known as the ChickTine Come in and see our Baby Chicks being raised on PURINA STARTENA. baick’ and ptit new men on the job while the old’ runners caught serve time and want for nothing while ‘doing time” as an allowance each month keeps them in radio entertain- ent and smoking and plenty of silk underwear and striped suits. KEEP MOVING — No sit down trikers where Uncle Sam gets boats. Orders were to clear out the"Down ers” so other men could work and police did the trick. Up in Detroit a mush-head governor tears up his oath of office and sides with the law less element. *Revolution and destruc tion of property pleases the “ Fifth Avenue Play Boy” down in Washing ton who soon is to fish for tarpon in the;Gulf of Mexico. We imagine he as tired of catching “northern suck- rs” and must stop and fish from a overnment boat at your expense. ‘Three Score and Ten” club and you annot become a member unless you re 70 years old. The question down ere is what to do with the club in limited quarters and have the Supreme Court packing plan adopted? R osevelt could under his power, rder the “ gas” turned on the mem- ership of 70 years or more. Miami in prohibition days was the home of Al Capone, head of a liquor yndicate that made millions and his estates are real show places which There are every kind o f Starting Mashes to be had— But there is only One STARTENA* and— That is PURINA STARTENA. Listen in on WLW every morning except Saturday at 7 :30 A . M. and get the Purina Program on Purina Startena and then start your Chicks Right. The Pn-Ri-Na Stpre . r» C.L. TELEPHONE—3 South Miller St. Cedarville, O. / - > • u ILot ; . * ( n ’ Mr, J< Cinchma $ i r wY 1 ' You i pictures ol W P. Chun .. Mrs. I sI %■ S^ringfie * fiaaday. , Mr, an . daughter week-end McMillar. 5 Mr. L< Hayes,K Street, n r andfami Remen Rodehea^ A score of times sitice being in the South, we have heard open sympathy for Chief Justice Hughes. The South is Democratic, of course, but we find it likes Hughes,- It must be pathetic to the Chief Justice, who administered the oath to'Roosevelt at the inaugura tion, to know that he, with other judges have been offered bribes of $20,000 salaries to retire or stand by their convictions in deciding New- Deal laws. But Roosevelt goes, further and says, “ If you cannot be bribed to quit the bench, then you must approve my plan or I will pack the court with my own 'stooges’.” 'No other acts BUY NOW — At dinner one eve ning at Sarasota it was our pleasure to be seated with a gentleman from: Pittsburgh, interested in the manu facture of steel for automobiles. He started in business first in Cleveland and nowleavSshis interestsin trusted hands after*SS years in the harness. Strikes; andto s t of business-caused us-id inquire, of ’ his idea of future business in this country; He says that steel products will mount in price for at least two years and the cost f living will-go higher than in 1923. Automobiles will cost more, so will ails, wire fence, farm machinery, etc. “Buy now,” he says, “but you had better stay out o f debt. You will save money on your automobile pur- hase for the labor unions .with Roose velt supporter at,the helm.” What of farm conditions? “ The count,y is be ing educated to play, not work or to provide for the future. The mot* that goes into pleasure the less there is for the home, decent clothes and sound living. All these things come FLEET —ALWAYS SOLD BY A MAN WHO OWNS HIS OWN BUSINESS -and THAT makes * difference! GASOLINE / T S t y [FLEl MOTOR OIL Robert “Bob” Huffman Phone 68 Cedarville, Ohio demonstrate the low,' debased mental ’from farm products and all will suffer, attitude of the Dictator in the White House. APPLAUSE — Senator Vic Don hey, Ohio, Democrat, domes out penning continued over-production on the farm and low-priceamThe farmer felt the slip first* before 1929 and he will be the first at the next crash.” Such was the prediction of the steel manufacturer, who says Roosevelt gainst the Roosevelt plan to pack the;wants high prices from manufactured Supreme Court. Vic received front , goods which make big income taxes page space in the Miami Herald, Dem- from miners, manufacturers, and re- ocratic paper, that opposes court pack- j tailers. The small consumer, pays the ing. The Ohio Senator was warmly big income taxes after all but he does complimented for his statement,,not realize it. * enator Bulkiey, Democrat, Ohio, who is riding the fence on this issue gets a artistic line on his radio speech when the Herald says, “Evidently he Buikley) is not acquainted with that form of government yet. It is demo eratic, Senator, not autocratic.” DECORATIONS — A mayor of a county seat town in North Carolina is pending two weeks under warmer sun in Florida. His town has several in dustries that manufacture cotton goods of ail kinds and employ 1600 men, women, boys and girls in five ......................... o __ o i _______ different plants. We asked him if attitude has been crowded out in much the same manner as |Iabor leaders, were attempting to or- liffht pushes back darkness. Having gained an Inner confidence !» ani7-e the employes in a union and his answer Was, “Not yet.” He says his town does not approve of-“ sit down” strikers because three of the firms a man may still lack the force to express it outwardly, courageously. , In similar mental mood a man may be confident in his own , , „ . mind that he can lift two hundred pounds o f sand. However,!cantc from th* north duo 40 labor When he has actually done it he isn’t afraid to tackle any two tloUl)lo‘ We sweated that Boos hundred pound sack o f sand, no matter who is looking. Then vc,t encouraging such strikes and he has confirmed courageous-confidence. But, how can he get ths flnBWerCftm<5quickly that no pres to do it? Easy1By practicing at every opportunity on twenty- d<mt WQ^d dictate What hie,*, town five pounds o f sand end then fifty and then an hundred and ehot<,3 do oh th®,4lK)r questions. Any then an hundred and fifty and finally on the two hundred. I f labor leader.jUteteteri* tronbie inmb he never masters the two hundred he will come much nearer iown Tiu find w doing so than as though he had not followed this method; decorated with a “hot application of The same method will do much in the matter o f developing tet and a ba®of feather*,** That Untried confidence into confirmed courageous-confidence (Snt> was thc closin« etatement of the b^*iolnj8Lftn,d 8ftying’things ? : ^ ,5^!J1?. . Jfwld, When ho has accustomed i r i T S X i V appreciation o f V ?a *p*«ty something.of whfch he has always been quite mayor. afraid and so on up the climb to mastenr "ffheiThe wtil' n'i'inv Sd ltM i Mm *lf w a tbjUtlM.to m e t , Zed condltlonaof which he was one* pesttivety fearful. “ ke mtiKla power, WANTED -— Strippers for New Deal leg show* that arc being staged in the cities to keep the unemployed from thinking about tiaore serious things, Draptatic play* and Opera* ate produced by the more thoughtful Where ever you go, yon hear cutting emarks about “sit-down” strikers. The South is fearful of the result of the strikes if Roosevelt has his Way in controlling the Supreme Court, The South Is daily drawing northern manufacturing, plants that formerly were located in northern cities, It makes no difference whether it is anvns gloves, house dresses, shoes, overalls, clothing, underwear or plush T00ds! ^heap labor attracts northern industry and the South thumbed its nose at Roosevelt, Hugh Johnson, and the rest pf the NRA buzzards,. A pot of hot tar and a bag of feathers .waits the first Roosevslt-Lewis union organizer who ligh*3 in most outhern industrial centers, The South gets a lot o f sport out of “stringing ® Rigger to the limb of a tree” and as a warm welcome for a labor union organizer. Roosevelt'dare not anger he South oh these matters even if he did*, prpmisf. .^..Pittsburgh negro uolication before election that lynch ing W illegal by f«d«r*l few. <.-Bat that Was before electip^ The Democratic boys and girls that swallow the No# Deal hook, line and sinker, should get ah earful of the following taken from the “Letter” columns In the Miami News, The Civil War’ is still beihg fought in the South over t)}e Farley order tp issup post age stamps honoring General Sher man of Ohio, ’lijto pad South Carolina bpve taken efflefej recognition of w$ef they call an In* HUlf iilJUte JtAMWieNAlAftl zw NTFffMG*M^wswviMN^vHIWV%ff*w MAlUff IHilfftMRM4UMR vvnv^nwiinnv •svwiu sb .MtelNMOMII tWna^^ tTw rs itfSste mwwaiao«oca owm triMNjNi STYUNS IMStOVai MMHtW KNMkACTIONMM* (SMMiiiiO You get all advantages—-you sacrifice nothing—when you buy a new 1937 Chevrolet with New High-Compresaion V^vc-in-Hcad Engiiw ‘ war*CTte>HTwtawi»e (WMOMMfmMSMSnae mmumm see, » t tCOMMKM. 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