The Cedarville Herald, Volume 60, Numbers 27-52

t .' i i *."»4 fl THE CEDARVI LLE HERALD KARLH BU L L -------- unax*~N«ttMu! wm*ui aww . — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Ohio H«w»hap« A juoc .; MUwl Y«U«y Pw tf A u k . The lifetime savings, of several Xenians will make the county capital take on metropolitan airs. Under both federn1 and state laws inheritance taxes are collected from estates, the former not invading the $5,000 field. The state has several, brackets of schedules to eat into an estate, Xenia’s wealthiest citizen was Miss Emma King and the state will take $87,000, the New Deal $100,000, while Xenia ity will receive about $43,000, choice sums to be extracted because the maiden •lady chose to be independent rather than dependent and save some­ thing for the “rainy day,” The city will also get a big slice from the estates of Mrs. Harrison Baker and Mrs. W. D. Crosley. All told the the city of Xenia will get about $76,- 000 according to unofficial estimates The King taxes have already been Entered a t the Post Office, Cedarvillej Ohio, October 31,1887, •a second class matter. __ __^______ ___ _ _ ™ ~ FRIDAY ju l y 2, 1937 -<■ v .............. GOVERNOR DAVEY TAKES THE BIT IN HIS TEETH I t is with some pride and a large degree of satisfaction tha t .we can comment favorable on the action of Governor Davey in using the power of the militia to protect independent steel workers tha t wanted to return to work but feared their lives from union anarchists. Complimenting the Ohio Demo­ cratic governor for this act may bring surprise in many quarters but it is due him even though we have been openly critical of his administration management, particularly his 90 million dollar budget program. Some months ago the. Governor made a campaign statement th a t he was proud of the fact tha t he had never used the state militia against labor unions and tha t he never would. That statement sounded much like the barn-yard prattle we ’get every few days from New Deal headquarters where John L. Lewis tells the President of the United States what he will and will not do. A campaign statement when there was no labor dis turbance might be different than what is expected today., While Gov. Earl of Pennsylvania and Gov. Murphy of Michigan were playing into the hands of Roosevelt and Lewis I paid and union labor was destroying, property and taking lives of I workers who refused to join the union, Gov. Davey joined I Xenia city authorities will erect a hands, upon advice from Washington by telephone, communica- modern city building from the pro- tion with the powers tha t be and ordered, steel mills closed. I .-eeds of inheritance taxes, along with It was not so many days until Governor Dayey discovered ja 45 per cent gift from Santa Claus he had been duped by Roosevelt, Perkins, Lewis and the rest of the Communistic hierarchy. The contest between labor lead­ ers and steel company management was a farce for the real fight was to force independent steel workers intcTthe union. Men were kidnapped, others slugged, many of these men had their homes bombed, but public sentiment was against the labor union warfare and here Governor Davey must have credit for ordering the steel mills open for work, the militia not to be used for or against the union but for the protection of thousands of men who were anxious to get back to work haying been forced out by false leaders, “We cannot waver,” said Gov. Davey, “Our clear duty is to give every assistance to the local authorities to prevent lawlessness of every description as it relates to the strike situation. * * * The rights of all citizens must be protected. * * * Government must not abdicate . to any who challenge its existence.” This is two-fisted sane talk. The Governor of Ohio is . taking no sides in any quarrel; he is simply upholding the law as it relates to everyone. This he makes clear when he says: down in Washington on a .$105,000 project. No bond issue will be neces­ sary. if Santa makes a donation ftfiBident has done nothing yet to con- vihce them otherwise. The Roosevelt packed labor board to hear charges and counter charges between the steel -companies and labor leaders, failed as completely as it was possible to make it, in forcing the company management to come to a greement with the labor anarchists. When steel said it would never sign a labor union contract that the Wag­ ner law did not provide for, then the unions has started to form a union ;poken Democratic papers hacking] Roosevelt have felt the pinch of the] guild” dictation. This is as it should be for anybody or a lything that can stomach Roosevelt - Lewis - Perkins should get the first dose of jwhat is intended for others. We know some very prominent Democratic publish­ ers that have heretofore been boss of their shop but today get orders in­ directly from John L» Lewis. John L. Lewis head of the CIO public became interested after a lulled nap in the harmony put out by the Communistic element. Today the na­ tion seems to be awake. Public senti- of all government employees .with the sanction of tlje New Deal. More than 800,000 men and women arc employed by the government, some 400,000 be- ment is making itself felt and even a ing put on the pay roll by the eco- few jelly fish governors that tried to ride the Communistic jackass to win popular approval, discovered them­ selves dumped alongside the road to common sense. The Ohio member of that board Charles Taft, Cincinnati, son of a former president, came out of the noble Roosevelt experiment with a stained reputation in political and economic affairs. The one son whom Ohio has had good reason to follow, will now find himself' in the nomical Roosevelt administration. Out in Illinois the farm element in the state legislature is fighting a' Lewis bill that would make it illegal for even the owner of a house, barn or chicken coop, to use.even a farm hand to do painting unless he first passed the necessary requirements and was licensed by the state. In Chicago more than 10,000 ’city employees are now members of the CIO and Mayor Kelly is asking the legislature author • “The right to work is sacred... The right to strike is equally valid. Those who want to return to their employment shall enjoy that privilege without being molested. Those who wish to remain on strike certainly are entitled to do so and to continue any and all lawful practices. “Law and order are so elemental in their relation to the rights of .men and the preservation of organized'society that they rise above every other consideration among a free people.” I Nothing could be more reasonable than this statement. It has no concern with the merits of the dispute between the steel companies and the CIO. It is conceiTied only with the right of (every man, employer, employee, unionist, non-unionist, and in- inocent bystander to enjoy the protection of government against interference and violence, as he goes about his daily business That the action of the Governor has broken the back -of the unlawful element forcing the strike there Can be no ques tion. The union leaders have not a leg to stand on when it • comes to constitutional government. The union, is under the power of a Communist dictator that respects neither, civil or moral law and worst of all he has, the political blacking of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the beneficiary of the* $500,000 cam­ paign gift last election, when Lewis was to be repaid with gov­ ernmental support of the murderous outfit behind the union racket. Gov. Davey even goes farther in his statement and lays an open indictment against Sec. Perkins, the Coiiimunisl labor secretary in the Roosevelt cabinet, when he says she wanted him (the Gov.) to kidnap the managers of the steel companies and hold them until they agreed to sign the Lewis union con tract. It is as unlawful for a governor to kidnap a citizen as it is for any known criminal to commit such a deed. Meantime while citizens were demanding that men be permitted to return to work the Hyde Park Squire presided over a Democratic love felast and week-end drunk for Congress on an isle in the Potomac river where one congressman says beer was served Gov. Davey was evidently moved to do his sworn duty. Roose velt had nothing to say because public sentiment was driving Lewis and his murderous outfit out of the picture. The inheritance tax is. a wonderful thing to everybody except the family .hat must stand the loss. The fellow ,hat applauds such tax today may be the same chap that belches a grudge igainst both the state and local tax­ ing district if lie happens to fall heir to the savings of some one else. We: never could see the justice of taxing thrift after a man or woman are dead. Some years ago we engaged in argu­ ment with a member of the legislature just previous to the passage df . the Ohio law. Here is. how his estate ended. Shortly before'the legislator’s death the sheriff sold his large farm. He' had been so busy trying to place the arm of the state into the other fellow’s pocket that he lost everything he haJ accumulated and had been left to him by his father. A son has been on government relief. It’s ’-all a sad itory but true that the fellow that is always trying to manage his neigh­ bors affairs usually finds himself en­ gulfed in failure. same class as that of a brother, _ ity for taxation to meet an increase Robert Taft, Cincinnati, who is p a rt,of salaries amounting to three million of the Republican dead wood that is!dollars which the union demands and keeping the party below the water’s'have threatened to strike. If only level. Robert is of the old Cox- ]the supporters of Roosev'elt-Lewis and Hynicka gang in Hamilton county and. the New Deal could be forced to pay wants to run for U, S. Senator, and -for this Communistic program Charley "has ' prained his back might not last long. ° trying to carry the Roosevelt-Lewis i —------------------- - Communistic labor union demands. All that can be Written about the Cleveland , labor meeting" is that Charley was found in bad company on a dirty mission. Heavy Damage To North Ohio Crops Crops in northern Ohio as we view­ ed them this week following the heavy rains and floodwaters are in a bad condition. From Logan county north to Toledo we find no such crops as we have in •this section. Thousands of acres of all kinds of crops suffered Censorship may not be bold but it is just around the corner. For in­ stance over in England, the govern­ ment did not permit motion pictures of the Duke of Windsor’s wedding to, be shown. Oyer here the public wit- froin standing water. The fiat country tiess everything. Over in London jn n0rthem Ohio as well as Indiana pictures were shown on the movie has probably suffered more this year screen of the Chicagosteel riot when from an cxcess. Qf r!lin thttn by strikers murdered innocent steel (),.outh last year. Many fields of workers wanting to return to woik corn'have been worked down and sown SeM— 14 , 00 © M ill • * It’s a long w*y hom any dairy linn in Amirioa to Chlangmai, Slam# By railroad and atoamar and pack train th i diatanoi la mozi than 14,000 milns. T fi products fromAjmarioan dairy farms ar»u**d to Siam. Each,. __ year millions of pounds sra bought and used in jfiStotf places throughout tbs world.' In 1837 Gall Borden'* "canned” milk first opsnsd toe yray forworld-wide sailing of dairy product*. Foreign outlet* tot American milk are the result of modem sales and research pioneering. Every million pounds of milk produced that finds a market in foreign lands, further supports the flow of milk money back to the farms of America. . j . a ji . b j . i ' ij iit t i FUKCHASEE5 OF MUX MANUFACTURERS OF Mill! PRODUCTS DISTRIBUTORS THROUGHOUT THEWOBID ROMEO AND JULIET IN ECONOMIC ROYALIST SETTING No young couple ever plighted their troth before so many millions of interested citizens than did Ethel duPont/ of “eco­ nomic royalist” fame as Juliet, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr., the modern Romeo from the house of the New Dealers, where hatred for economic success was born and class distinc­ tion a part of the New Deal religion. While love has had its way and the same thousands that have discussed this marriage sat in wonderment over what King Franklin would do, there has been wishes for the greatest success for the young couple. As for the two interested families that have been tied only by an imaginary cotton cord they are still as fa r apart as Shakespeare's-Capulets and Montagues. The house of duPont and the house of Roosevelt just will not unite even though loving hearts stand between in the role of Shakespeare's “Romeo and Juliet.” The duPonts have been pictured by the Roosevelts as a scum that has covered the economic sea, all of which was a pa rt of the New Deal program of developing class' distinc­ tion. The duPonts have had a successful business career as success is measured under the New Deal dispensation. Roose­ velt once headed a company tha t marketed worthless German bonds to American investors but the same yard stick was not in use in those days. The duPon t have been handicapped when it comes to the unusual, so far as we learn no elder duPont ever wrote in his will that his son for his natural lifetime should have a guardian in the form of a trust company. Who can tell? Some day a Roosevelt might be handling the duPont millions. If he adopts and follows the duPont tradi­ tion tha t opportunity may get in his way. If he accepts the New Deal doctrine of spending everything he has and what everybody e^se has, the line of lemarcation between the house of duPont andrthe house of Roosevelt will always be visible. * t, ThP, consumer is no longer the “forgotten man.” He is the felloiv tha t is paying for the noble experiment in Communistic government in this country. * Resident John N, Garner, who abdicated the throne m the Roosevelt dynasty, and returned to his home in Texas, foHowing a break with the King, gives out a report again this week that he will not return to Washngton. Stnte jUiditor Ferguson hold up pay check for $400 to an a S. U. professor, who is on leave of absence to take on extra w i*k f<y f cuS ! ty board to Columbus a t a monthly salary of $4 5 f The Auditor says the law prohibits holding two offices a t the same time. The Auditor may be flirting wtth defeat for questioning any New Deal plan of spending In conversation with a well-known dentist in a neighboring city last week >ve learned that he had made effort to get a crippled girl of tender years in the -famous Warm Springs Foundii- tion, Georgia. Through contact with the head of the institution the dentist virus informed that it would cost $80 a week to keep the child in- the Roose- velt guilded palace. The financial obligation was such that only a mil­ lionaire could afford such a charge and tic then made a trip to St. Louis, 'where he laid the ease before the head of- the. Shrine Hospital-for Crippled Children. This institution with eleven others are maintained for the care, treatment and education of deformed children that in after life they will be able to support themselves. If the family is unable to pay anything the rhild gets the treatment just the same but where a family is able to pay, a modest charge is made. Each member of the Shrine order pays two dollars^ a year to keep up the institution. Compare the Shrine plan, for charity igainst the $80 a week charge a t the Roosevelt institution. The little girl needing treatment is related to a number of well known Greene county families, several in Cedarvillc. but refusing to, join the Union. In SOy beans this country the pictures were held, ___ up, not from direct order ofconstitut- j ed authorites but from head of the' union. Radio news commentators are subject to the same censorship if union labor leaders speak the word, - Last but npt least is the “ guild” a painted term for labor union of re- proporty> 80 ehickens belonging to porters and editorial writer*. Large floward Cre8WolI being in hi8 posses_ •ity newspapers now find tlieir edi­ torial offices unionized and under the forms of a contrnct even the owner of thd paper'eannot dictate to a union the OWjter. Harry Tnrr forgery, or guild editorial Writer. So. far out- Foi-ty-seven witnesses were examined. The grand jury has returned indict-! mcnfcs, eight person who were named; and two secret. James Robertson,: Osborn, operating motjtir car without owner’s consent. Forest Nooks, color­ ed, charged with receiving stolen sion. Elijah Gilbert cutting with in­ tent to kill. Janies Childers charged . with conversion of property to defraud Safe and Sure . • ___ .♦ . . ___ For 53 Years This Association Has Paid Regular Dividends The Current Dividend Is Paid At The Rate Of PER fQ ANNUM : Accounts Opened by July 10th Draw Dividends from July 1st ^ and are Federally Insured. SPRINGFIELD FEDERAL SAVING a n d LOAN ASS'N 28 E. Main St. ’The Pioneer Association of Springfield Springfield, O. A representative of the advertising Jcpartment of one of the well-known ulvertisirig agencies in talking to a group of publishers gave a vivid picture of what the strike actually neans in dollars and cents to not only ‘he nswpapcr but the local agent. When the labor union leader orders 'iis members out on a strike he is not >nly doing injury to the manufacturer, vr stockholder of the company, but is ^tabbing local business in the back. The advertising appropriation for notor cars is based on the number of mrs sold, a certain sum being. set iside for that purpose. If the cats ■annot be made due to a strike then the newspaper suffers. The heaviest load falls on the local dealer of cars affected by labor strikes. If the factory is closed down there is no need off steel, and this puts steel em­ ployees on forced vacation. The local dealer must have cars to sell his cus­ tomers otherwise he cannot take care of his overhead represented in his rent for garage or salesroom, or taxes, in­ surance and income from investment in his real estate. The local dealer must have salesmen ,and he must have employees In his garage. If he cannot get cars for his customers he cannot keep his employees on the pay roll and have anything left for himself. Almost every community has one or more automobile agencies so you can figure how this strike business hurts business for cvcryohc. Its about time to conclude that the Lewis gang if no different and no better than that 'leaded a t one time by A1 Capone, other than the latter operated without government protection. Lewis has the President of the United States and a few governors working for him, «t east that is the opinion of a large pkrt off the American people, and the - / fe Local a *1 Mias Ruth h Ohio State Un work on her IV Mr, and Mrs. mington spent Weimer. M«. Walter dren of Baltina ten day visit parents, Mr. ai Mr. and Mrs. to Cherry Foil ning, due to th brother,, Mr. H Kyles returned Mr. and Mn tained with a r nesday evening were William Chick, Norman Reed and Mr. Reed and Mr. a Martin Wcii and Reed Weim .Saturday of Mi Antioch, Ohio. Blue Ribbon fifth meeting a Jane Turnbull, are planning s future. After ments were si played. Rev. W'. II. pastor of the sixteen years -Ejresbytierian Sept. 1. Rev. off the Cincinm Xenia church by the two c< Pastors of Church,- Xenia, • byterian Chin under consider pits, depend ine the two cong Tilford- of the ■ ed pulpits Sun Deen, of the < i Robert J. R Ann Arbor, M Reed is expect in' the Univei Reed is work Music degree Geneva Cblle- graduate worl ity and New ratinfr-with S cajion at pre years of appi rank. Mr. Rc music in the work, band, i grades and h Mr. A. J. town visited r t a * v kL ’N ield, Elec Persor. El* Lot Belv M < R c mm 0 i f t:# m m n «v«v ■ j f i '

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