The Cedarville Herald, Volume 60, Numbers 27-52
x m m m m w m *3& , r m x t , t u l y » , m T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D KARLH B U L L --------- BditurUl Aim. — e d it o r a n d p u b l i s h e r Ohio K w w w A im ,: Mliwl V<Jl*y Frau A im , Entered at the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 81 ,1887 , M second class ipatter. FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1937 HERE IS STATESMANSHIP Senator A. Vic Donahey is as close to the people of Ohio $a any o f their public servants. Across three decades he has identified himself with the interests of the common man, declar ing it .in words and proving it in action. His statement con cerning pending legislation and administration policies is there fore of peculiar interest and validity. That statement is one of the ablest and most significant manifestos to come from an American political leader in a long time. “ I promised the people of Ohio that if they elected me I would ‘support the President in every proper manner.* I promised to uphold the ideals of our state and nation. In trying to carry out these promises I have voted ‘no’ more times than I have voted ‘yes’,” This blunt declaration *goes to the very heart of a legis lator's function. Obliged to choose repeatedly between the public* interest and the President’s advice, he has chosen to back the public interest; * ■ .:' . “I* am opposing now and will vote against the reorganisation of the Supreme Court,” * Words cannot be more plain. Here is no cowardly retreat into the shadowy safety of a “compromise,” but a statesman like declaration. Senator Donahey is equally explicit on ap propriations and taxes : , “I have opposed and will resist further discretionary ap propriations by Congress, unless a grave emergency exists. I will oppose any further plan of taxation that is not based strictly on ability to pay.” .’ , Adverting to the maze of difficulties surrounding strikes and labor disputes, the Ohio Senator declares for orderly gov eminent* rightly believing that the scrupulous enforcement o:: the law is neither for nor against labor, neither for nor against management. “The sovereign states have plenty of laws to protect the people in the enjoyment of their peace and safety, and it is the duty of the Governor, courts, sheriffs, and city police to promptly punish law violation, whether it be found in high or low places. * * * States’ rights means responsibility in the enforcement of state laws, without fear or favor. The Federal Government has the same duty to per form in the enforcement of Federal laws.” With simplicity and clarity, Senator Donahey has state< the essential truth which, once recognized, will bring an end of industrial disorders and a resumption of stable production. Senator Donahey has not “broken with the administra tion.” The truth is that he never supported it, save as its policies coincided with his own sincere views o f the public interest. His statement simply clarifies in one comprehensive statesmanlike utterance the creed of a fair-minded and con scientious public servant.' Coming as it does from a man-close to the plain people o:’ Ohio, this declaration signifies a lack of popular support for the President’s current policies. ”It shows also that resistance to Executive domination is not merely tHe penchant of “eco nomic royalists.” And, finally, it proves that as least one Senator will be voting steadily and bravely for sound, enduring national policies. This, let it be said again, is statesmanship. > -—Cincinnati Enquirer. f .„ fmmup < « a | When Senator Vic Donahey in a jubllc statement issued a rebuke to the Roosevelt Communistic crowd in control he was virtually sayiny, “get back in the Democratic party mid fol- ]ow the traditions of your fore fathers,* When Ohio’s leading Senator takes issue with tfte 'towers that be in Washington by disapprov ing the Supreme Court packing plan; demanding divorcement from the Communistic Reds fomenting labor strikes and confiscation of property; opposing the Roosevelt re-organiza tion plan as unsound and winning back public support by eliminating the squandering of government money; and returning to a sound money policy, there was not much left for the .Roosevelt New Dealers to do but get back in Democratic ranks where Jeffersonsian principles have been traded for New Deal ideas fostered by the brain-truster .crack-pots. So far as the public is. concerned Ohio now only has one Senator, Donahey, for it was ill luck that Sen. Buckley fell for the. Communistic-Lewis de man of Roosevelt for packing the Supreme Court with Lewis appointees, Buckley has dropped from the public prints and a well-started public career has been blighted. Wwk P**M» that oqt or more daily agents. As we peeped Into ft small papers give UP the fight. The de- book covering Ohio the quality was mands of labor unions, increased cost, rated as only fair as a whole, of production and the inability of the jQuantity means nothing to wheat business management to get sufficient!buyers and wheat will be graded much* revenue to meet these excessive costs, {closer this year due to the oyer coupled with the cost of social security jabundance of rain, by the New Deal, makes the load’ greater than many papers can stand.! Commercial banka made the That newananers face a serious percenta&® £ain in money loaned . , ... , >on farm real estate mortgages in the future with labor, paper and g o v e r a - ; ^ ^ q{ ■ rndividuala ment costs mounting each year, can e be best judged when we give you just- , what the Guild, Lewis labor union f o r : ■ ■ editors and reporters, costs one news paper, a paper that has always sup- “The Singing MiurinewDance*, Too! The Philadelphia Inquirer says: ported the New Deal. When the Guild {“The old saloon may have ruined the took charge of the editorial depart-j husband and father, but it let the ment-the increased costs to the man-(wife, mother, and daughter alone.” agement was $10,000. To overcome , cost the this increased management has increased advertising rates. The first of the year subscriptions will be increased. So it is the readers, in cluding the supporters of the New Deal, that will pay the cost of the Communistic experiment. The owner of the paper in question is a Demo- _ crat and the editorial rooms of most{§ Ohio daily Democratic papers felt the J When Gov. Davey issued his ulti matum that he would use the state militia to protect workmen that want ed to return to their jobs bis name immediately emblazzened the first page of all the . metropolitan daily newspapers in the country, north and south, east and west. His scorching answer to Emma Goldman Fefkins burnt all lines to Communistic head quarters a t one end of Pennsylvania avenue. Davey’s name even went into larger type than that of Roosevelt with a wedding in the public eye. FOURTH A CARNIVAL OF DEATH A few y^Ars ago the Fourth of July was looked upon as a day when a long list of dead, burned and injured from fire Works would be reported: Today we still have a greater fatal ity list but not alone from fire work's. The motor car claims the greatest number 6 f. victims just as it does on week-ends and especially on Decoration Day and Labor Day. More than two hundred persons lost their lives over the week-end including the. Fourth all from motor car and drownings. The number injured not reported but strange to say not one life was lost due to fire works. The campaign against the sale and use. of fire works on the Fourth has proven its worth. It has not only been the means of saving lives and reducing injuries but, the fire hazzard has been eliminated. This means much to property owners. The largest cities, in Ohio now prohibit the sale and use of fire works within the city limits. Many smaller cities have adopted the plan and even villages are doing likewise. Dayton, Xenia and Jamestown now forbid: the sale and use of fireworks. It will not be long until all villages will adopt the same measure o f safety. Door to «|oor and ■tore to store M ilk and its products do not soil themsolves.Thoymuit bo sold—from door to door and from atora to atora. Only by aggraaiiva aalaaaanahip can millions^! pounds of milk from thousands of dairy farms ba sold day aftsr day, yaar aftar year. In tha complicated businasa of bridging tha long diatanoa from oow to consumer, Borden is expart. Vital to tha income of tha dairy farmer, era the tana of thousands of calls made by Borden man In this and foreign lands, avary day sailing milk and milk products—door to door and store to store. ASSOCI AT ED COMP AN IE S • mCHAJEttOFMIUC MANUMCTUKMOfMIUCPRODUCTS OJSTRUUTORSTHROUOHOUTTHIWORLD I thought YOUWERE a t u s s y F A T F t i HOTAN . iV/WRC* Otter-indulgence in food, drink, or tobacco frequently brings on an pvar-ftcid condition in the sto mach, gas on stomach, headache, sour stomach, colds, and muscular pains. To gat rid of the discomfort and oorreot the add condition, taka A LK A - SELTZER Alka-Seltser contains Sodium Ace- tyl-Saltoyhtfe (an analgesic) in com bination with vegetable and mineral aMcallaern, itamt tn tggki utiBt Aika-Selteor by tba diMk M i ft# tiI ■ f V * ' V ‘ ^ f‘ V f / f E«y PleiMit WayTo LOSE FAT How would you like to loie your fat, increase your energy and improve your health? How would you like to lose your double chin and your too prominent - hips and abdomen and at the same time make your skin so clean and clear that it Will compel admiration? Get on the scales to-day and see how much you weigh—then get a hot* tie of Kruschcn Salts that cost next to nothing and which will last you 4 weeks, Take one half teaspOonful in a glass of hot water in the morning— cut down on pastry and fatty meats-- go light ort potatoes, butter, cream and sugar—and when you have fin ished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again, * Notice also that you have gained in energy—you feel younger in body— Kraschen will give any fat person a joyous surprise, Refuse Imitations— safeguard your health—you lose fat SAFELY the Jfruschen way, NOTg—Many people find that the only diet change necessary while tek ln| Kruechen regularly fa TO RA”) When one of the young Roosevelts stepped into the house of duPont and took. unto himself a wife, it would indicate, that the young man was not letting the political quarrel of bis father and the members of the multi millionaire fainily stand between. .Now the press says a younger brother of the Roosevelt household has his eye on the daughter from a million aire Boston banker’s home. It must be evidlent that the younger genera tion o f the Roosevelt family is not following the whimsical butterfly il lusions a t their, father. Predatory wealth from the homes of even “eco nomic royalists” has hot yet angered “ Papa” to the extent that Hie boys have been reprimanded publically. Maybe some of these days the Ameri can public will awake to the fact that it was Barnurn that first applied the rules of “mob psychology” and that this social hatred as preached by Roosevelt after all had no meaning, only a trap to lure the unsuspected into the John L. Lewis Communistic camp. A committee of ministers a t Indiana Harbor, Ind., where the Ljswis follow era hold fast the gates of the big steel mills and refuse to let any em ployees or even the owners of the plant enter, have taken a postal card Vote among some 8,000 employees and the result is that 86.6 per cent of the men want to return to work without molestation or chance of injury. The ministers have appealed to Gov. Townsend, (D.) Indiana, for troops to protect these men, but the Governor being politically obligated to Roose velt and Lewis, finds it hard to even recognize the ministers. The ministers should exercise"more caution' and,not get too bold with this invasion into the ranks of the Roosvelt revolution ists. H | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | m ||t ||H |, ||M| | | , | „ | M |m ||| | |||M M |||||||||||| ||n ||| I 5 PER CENT | j FARM LOANS j I No expense to borrower for | commission or appraisal, Any part payable borrower. at option of heavy hand of the union demand J |- first, except the Cincinnati Enquirer, ! WM. H. McGERVEYl Some says there is no harm in fire- | , 204 E- Second 39 W.' Main i works.‘ This is true depending on who | XENIA, OHIO I is handling them. A wreckless man 111MII11I1II5 Dick Powell, popular clntjma songster, has one of the finest role* of his. long and successful career in the new Warner Bros, hit, “The Singing Marine," which opens a week's engagement a t the Regent theater, Springfield, Friday. July 9, Co-starred with Pow ell in this- sensational new music comedy hit is Dorris Weston, r e - . cent discovery of Major Bowes amateur hour. “The Singing Ma rine” Is classed by .national, film critics to be Just about the swell- oat bit of musical screen entertainment in recent years. ____ can do els much .harm-as the excited thoughtless boy. The fact that no lives were lost Monday would indicate , that the wave that swept the country following so many deaths has had its effect. This year out in a Colorado town fireworks let go all because a boy thoughtless threw a fire-cracker the wrong way. A number of people were in the store at the time bu , it wps fortunate that no lives were lost even though several were badly burn ed. Insurance companies now de mand •a permit for the sale of fire works in an insured building. If you have not such and have a fire the loss is yours. Last Wednesday we bad an extra hour while in Chicago and, dropped in to look over'the Board of Trade where the grain markets are made, It was near the closing hour and the market dropped. We inquired of a floor buy er at the close of the market what caused the drop. He informed the writer that Sec. Wallace was contend ing there would be an over production of wheat for 1938 and the world market could not absorb it. This caused buyers to loose interest on futures. Anxious to know something about what wheat speculators use as a guide we found that brokerage houses have scouts that survey and report just the , actual condition. Brokers do not depend on government FREE THIS BREAKFAST SET WILL BE AWARDED Thursday Night July 15 AT 8 O’CLOCK This set is awarded in co-operation with the Chicago Paint Works, Chicago and is being presented to direct attention to their Quality Paints. v GATHER UP YOUR FREE TICKETS. REMEMBER YOU MUST BE HERE IN PERSON TO RECEIVE THE AWARD. MARK THE DATE — JULY 15 — BE HERE AT 8 P. M. The award will be made in front of our store. This is the time to paint. Let us estimate your.job. , CUMMINGS & CRESWELL HARDWARE COMPANY Phone 78 Some days ago while on a trip to Chicago we passed two of the largest j steel plants in the Chicago territory. Both the highway and the New York ! Central lines pass these plants. Here ! great crowds of striking steel workers j had barracaded the streets and every | entrance to the plants, Piles of steel) slugs and rocks could be seen, this being the ammunition of the Roosecelt1 Communists that have control. It was ' also the sight of the Decoration Day • massacre when a number of strikers! were killed by the police who tried to bring about peace. As a result the Chief of Police was sighted to Wash- irtgton to testify before a packed Ln- Follcttte investigating committee, the j -nairman being a Socialist. The Chief; said his men were fired upon by strikers and they returned fire. His ! policemen followed orders and fifty- one of them were members of t h e , American Legion, all of which wa s ' like dynamite in the ears of the New i Dealers. Because policemen do their j duty to preserve order and property, a government in Washington make light of it. The New Deal has made the grave yard for newspapers more necessary 1 the past year than any time for many years Some days ago Henrst suspended the New York American which let 2,800 employees out. Last week the city of Albany, N. Y., state capital, witnessed the folding up of the morning paper and only one paper is left in that field. This week the Seattle Star employees went out on a strike and that paper suspended,, These are all daily papers. Not a'
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=