The Cedarville Herald, Volume 60, Numbers 27-52
ft iMt WHSKHEUL — *•*** m m er* to tiiU M ffi y y i y tti.w ^ p u g w ^ g g ^ ^ M u i . .. ilffi i YMfc Cf fDARVILLB HBRALD m w m * ------------ EDITOR AND FUBUBHBSt AU| l|gM|||» JyMLf Mteltf TftUitf VlHf ilMCt , Ohio, October 81,1887, ' ..' i^ lD A Y , IfOVgUliBB S, 1987 ~ ^ mm imm an d a m c r o f ^ ntrol Eopr tiust it ?■at been datormtaed that the government will ntmejSIN * phan o f eora loana and crop control, farmers will with interest the reaction thst takes place in the grain m itpalates to com. At present com is selling around fttfgested base for loans is 50 less a shrinkage o f From some quarters it is predicted that com now will sot go any higher due to the enormous crop and the gov ernment guarantee. In the past Axed loan Values have always tied down the price, as large consumers will not stock com knowing they can get it in the market any day. This daily supply will tend to hold the price down. Details o f the crop control are not public but we notice some congressmen are not willing to legislate for the voluntary crop control plan. Cong. Bankhead says he will introduce a bill with the compulsory feature on the part o f all com growers. Such a plan with police checkup and penalty fo r violation would meet our approval.. The voluntary plan, if we are to have government regulation o f the-farms, is very unfair, One congressman suggests regulation fo r farms o f a minimum acre age, say 150 acres, on the theory that it is hot the small farms mat over produce, but the large farms, His second objection is that so much income is required to meet overhead on any farm, larger small, and that the small farmer is at a disad vantage compared with farms o f larger acreage. The whole plan o f crop control is in theory about the same as what we have in “ managed currency.” Gold price is fixed and all other prices go down fo r the producer’s crops. Crop control With the suggested compulsory feature under penalty fo r violation would do much to educate the farmer and give him a teste,o f What other lines o f business experience due to goVernmeht^egulfetion as to wages and hours or labor. m iA I 4 -'k A AUDITOR THAT IS ON THE JOB 'jwTr- New York City might bo Demo cratic and Tammany might have boon a groat poRtfegl fighting fore* but it was not enough to defeat Mayor La Guardia for re-election. In addition District Attorney Deweywas re-elect ed in return for his prosecution of racketeers in that city. The political complexion In Now York was com plex to say the least LaGuardia is a former Socialist Congressman bat was elected this time by endorsement of the Republicans, Independent Dem ocrats, American Federation of Labor and other organisations, The old line or Tammany candidate for mayor was handpioked by Postmaster General dim Farley representing Roosevelt. Their choice , in the Democratic primary was Judge Jeremiah Ma honey, who defeated Senator Cope land, anti-New Dealer. Roosevelt and Farley upbraided Tammany in the: primary at a corrupt organisation. In the election Tuesday, Roosevelt and Farley joined with Tammany to defeat LaGuardia, the situation caus ing muchcomment in view of criticism Roosevelt had heaped on Tammny in the past. Every federal appointee in New York was lined up in support of Mahoney. t . Greenfi county taxpayers owe much to County Auditor, Janies J, Curlett, lor his interest and diligence in looking after the county’s interest. Some months ago the, state set up the claim that Greene county owed the state$36,862.21 fo^the care o f county.wards in feeble-minded institutions at Columbus and Orient during a twelve year period from 1925’ to 1936. The claim seemet preposterous to .Auditor Curlett for two1reasons, .that such charge was out o f reason for the number of patients that would be sent to a state institution from a county o f this size. Another reason was that if the bill was correct why would the state . wait twelve years to ask for payment? ■ t »Mr. Curlett made a trip to Columbus and it did not take him long to find out that the county had been overcharged and that the state was asking for pay fo r patients that had been dead for several years. As a search o f the records'would require much time Mr. Curlett secured the service o f a special accountant in Columbus to investigate state records for a period o f years back. The investigator covered twelve years and found that instead o f Greene county owing the state, the situation was .reverse. He found the county had paid the state $97,094,43 the past twelve years and that the state should only have-billed the county for $54,232.23 for the same period. The over charge ^amounts to $36,862.21, The investigator finds the actual cost to fjhe state was $3.50 a week and the state has been billing the county on the basis, o f the maximum amount o f $5.50 al lowed by law. * >•' <;■’ T(i . „ ■f , The state has frowned on the exposure yet admits the proceedure as ait error, which according to reports has happen ed to every county in the state. Error or no error had it not been for Mr. Curlett’s interest in the administration o f his *office, he could have paid the bill,, on condition such an amount could be foundr and the . average citizen would never have known the difference. The state is careful to check public officials in the smaller taxing,districts, even counties, yet little attention must he paid to state offices if what has happened is a sample'. AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION The easiest and surest Way to enjoy the distinction of living to a ripe old age is to properly care for that God-given mechan ism-—your body. There are no spare parts fo r sale at bargain counters. When one o f your vital organs fails prematurely, through neglect or hard, use, you’re finished. With the bless ings o f modern medical science that now exist, there is little . excuse foir this happening. " „ Recently a life insurance company, in its advertising, stressed the importance o f taking the tuberculin test. This test ,adequately proves tjfie soundness o f the old adage that “ ah ounce* o f prevention is worth a pound o f cure.” You should make it your business to investigate the tuberculin test and protect yourself and your Children with it. :1 % . First page space is soon to go to the Duke and Dutchess from England. The New Deal will be found oh the Want page if a “ fireside chat” is not Ordered. Safe and Sure For 53-Years This Association Has Paid Regular Dividends The Current Dividend Is „ Paid A t The Rate Of .FEE ANNUM Accounts Openedby Itevember 10th Draw-Dividends from November 1st * and 'are Federally Insured. J |of riew things of interest to taxpayers j stilt be served as dessert. Rumors of Icertain deals.elsewhere leaves a per spective that interesting things that cause tongues to wag are just under the eurface. wanernu nanus MVDW MS MAS AM’S P X * * • ^ ^ County Engineer W. J. Davis breaks into print in Columbus papers aa a remit of an Investigation into the State Highway Department. Mr. : Davis, as is his usiial custom, calk a , spade a spade, in any gathering. ’ When asked for certain information ’ as to the present method of state highway building he made no effort to. shield anyone when he stated that tlk "highway engineer” was only for higher-ups to hide behind, or words to that offset. The investigation shows that ths Davsy gang plaoed .What is known as "black-top” 18 inches deop on one mile of highway ip the upper part of the state, The greatest un cover ha* been in tit# price the state a*4 ewteki Miss have been paging tracing of the ewaewMp o f the Xante ter What is knew* t f TVl*5 top eeat Herald. Some months ago Harry ter roads. The state has bean pay- Rice, former publisher, stopped vs on teg Urns and three times as amok for‘ the street in Springfield, and in ti* same material as son* cities have ■quired whether the ownership of his paid In the late ten days. Greene*former paper hsd been made public, eowsty has tea meads, Ofariaugti ptice;Net having any information, or a di« Sad Dayton/Mhe cat of Xenia, thetjrect interest, we knew nothing other hi $ta',ippe«tigntloB. However ithan the first announcement, that Rice pot involved aa!h#d sold out to Seymour TibbaJs, highwears. Franklin, O, The jppttion was brought up again in Democratic Tho New Dopi gets little catisfac-* circles following the impeachment tion out of the election results over]movement against Sheriff Henkel the country TUeday. With the Dem-ILater a query went out from a .state ocrats looting taeir shirt in New York;taxing board to newspaper organize- City, a Roosevs|t stronghold,, his home!tion leaders aa well as county officials city, and losaos in large Cities where • trying to fix the ownership of the the Democrats united with the Lewis (Democratic organ. Mr, Tlbbal# denied CIO labor union support, there can ownership and named J. A> Chew, be littie to boast about at Roosevelt.Xenia, as owner. We Understand this headquarters- Detroit with hundredsjwas denied and again the state- board o f thousands of automobile employees<even had to go to Washington to find that belogg to the CIO union, fell to j out just who the mysterious owner th# enemy, the Lewi# candidate for might be. No success: there and as mayor being defeated. The same was from a dear sky comes the announce- true in Akron and Uanfcon, O. The ment that Seymour Tibbals has sold Republicans will control the New the Herald,to R. A. Higgins and Rose York state legislature. Ohio Demo- Mower. Mr. Higgins is editor of the, crate trembled, at the election results Xenia Gazette, and his sister, Mrs. fh Democratic Sidney and St. Marys,. Mower, who has been prominent in both of which elected Republican newspaper work in Xenia, has been mayors. Even. Republican mayors in editor of the Herald since Mr. Rice re- many places fell by the wayside where tired from ownership, the electors disapproved o f wild. ——=— spending for municipal purposes to For Sale—Petoskey Potatoes, haw! get New Deal money. The election is over and (the usual campaign cannards have been laid to reet. The crop this season locally was probably-a bit largerthan in former years. Those in the know just smiled at the reported liquor parties the night before election. Its an old 'custom in Cedarville. It all depends who gets credit for staging the wet gatherings.' We did a little snooping at safe distance, and learned dozen or more had drank out of the same set -of bottles. One has an in-, curable disease of the social order and has .sought miedical aid from pub lic authorities. 'There will be other elections and other liquor parties in theTuture. In speaking o f liquor parties toe learn that Old Age Pension author ities have ordered a number of so- called “drunks” dropped from the pension'list in this county. The order applies over the state as well, Democratic State Auditor Ferguson has been investigating the Democratic state liquor board and how it operates. He uncovers a plan whereby the board cancelled a contract months ago with a trucking company that was de livering liquor to stores at 10c case. The new or paper company composed of ..three Democrats, (two men and a woman, next get-the con tract at 17c a case for the same de livery. The paper company having no trucks sublets the contract to a truck, ing company for 10c a case. The profit to the paper company is placed at less than $5,000 a month. It de livers no liquor for.it owns no trucks. The examination also shows that the Davey Democratic liquor hoard has $440,000 o f liquor profits belonging to the Old Age Pension fund tied up in dead liquor. Pensioners did not re ceive the September check until late in October as the pension fund was depleated for nearly •* month, Last fall the Davey pension hoard pre sented every pensioner a $10 gift just before election, this money being bor rowed from Columbus banks. Payday, came this fall and old age pensioners had to wait until there was money in the fund. It is amusing what one Democrat can upturn on anotherDem ocrat in this era of salvation under the New Deal. Things are beginning to buzz in Xenia if our earn serve us right. The old fight between the Democratic or ganisation and the County Infirmary management comes to the front this |week. Some wild stories are afloat of what happened at the institution under one month of Democratic rule, the truth we may know about later. .The State Civil Service Commission ‘ re-instated Supt. Kildow attd wife after they had been "fired” by the' ’ votes of two Democratic county com- ’ missioners. The commissioners Tues day reduced the Salaries Of Forest “Kildow, son of the Supt. and ReUa |Gustin, cook, to one dollar a month, i effective Nov. 1, Both Democratic commissioners approved the action while the Republican member declined to vote, The next stop, is court action . if Xenia gossip is correct and a lot graded, grown for culture Project. Phone 15JL-F12. Vocational Agri- Wallace Collins (t) Subscribe to “ TEE HERALD” Press’ dispatches carried an inter esting story Tuesday evening. It was that Franklin Roosevelt, registered at' the Hyde Park voting precinct, as a “Farmer.” The famous “farm” is UOted most for the output o f pansies, ■ifMiiMiMmmlMMHimiiimMtiMiiiMMNimiinHimitMiiniimi petunias and polo ponies. A six car;! garage makes it a complete “farm.” ,| By the way, the “farm” belongs to 11 the mother of the “Royal Highness.” * s il Local industry closes down due to business conditions after industry, wholesale and retail institutions, feel the weight of the newest depression*! following the famous Chicago speechJ and that proposed hour and wage law.;jj Chicago's largest department store jj reports business now three million j| under the same time last .year. ~ ' " tabor in Springfield auto plant as well as some in Dayton, now enjoying en forced vacation by closedowns. And the end is not yet. SPOT CASH PAID FOR HORSES ------^ COWS (Of Size and Condition) - Prompt removal o f Hogs, Sheep*, Calves, , Colts ■ Telephone 454 XENIA FERTILIZER & TANKAGE CO. Local MHii)uiuiiMiiMi»iiiniuH(miui,HiauuiHiiiiiuiHiuiimMin Ohio dry* won two-thirds of the. 157 local qption contests, Tuesday, and now three-fourths of the state, has been voted dry. There are 1337 town- drip* in Ohio and 984 were dry before the Tuesday election. , A sample of vote was in Wayne county when the drys won eight of the nine contests. || “ Button, button, who'a got the | button?” It must be a game this * | Glaser’s Beauty •Shop |Alt Lines .of BEAUTY CULTURE |Shapoo, Finger Wave | and Manicure........... ,75c I PERMANENTS— $3 and $5 517 First National Bank Bldg. Phone; M. 2111-J or' M. 1625-J . SPRINGFIELD, O. '(HHIHIinWIlWilWUllimp 4*Ji MOW ABOUT TUWMicULOffi! f % — eptem usually negative in early lubet-euletis, Six persons hove died from tehee- * J * ™ * * * £ * ~ il» calotis during the ewerent year, very ton^nction with otter totes. libT ttoS « four mete^ttdtote- A tedi«*^ttoa time-^riusW. a. fore the end- What ere wo going to au>d i to dtoywaia witir tePocl*! do about it? retorsaea to activity. If you have a persistent cough,' 5. Fluonwepic and x^ay —. most hotter mate sure that yon do not valuable o f a?i matitods. have tubereulosis. If yea have ¥>• U there is any doubt, a fluorscopk called bronchiti* or aetiuna, he sure examination should always ha made tint the diagnosis is ©orroct. If you with an x-ray if indicated. have been spitting bipod, he aura the , .......... 1 ........ deeding is not coming from a tuber-,. a daughter was bom to Mr. and ulosis lung. Have you been toeing Mrs, Ira Townaky at the heme o f the veight, feeling tired, weak, with no tetter’s parents, Mr, and Ms. A. L. mp? It may he tuberculosis. If Thompson, Alpha. •on have had repeated cheat colds, at-j ' ................... tgete of pneumonia, or pleurisy, «m - j Accounts insured up to $5000 with rider tho possibility of tuberculosis. Cedarville Federal Savings & Loan If yon carry a. temperature, especially Asan. in the afternoon, at least think of tubarcnlosis, Tuberculosis can and should be diagnosed in the early stage. The following are the accepted methods of diagnosis: ), Physical examination — not'al-j ways sufficient to detect early tuber-' culosis. ■: Local *• Dr. H. N. Williams DENTIST Yellow Springs, Ohio X-RAY EQUIPMENT Now is the Time to Winter Needs v WINTER OIL WINTER GREASE The First Freeze Is Too Late—Act Now! ANTI-FREEZE BATTERIES GOOD PRICES ON HEATERS ! DEFROSTERS RADIATOR COVERS ALL WINTER ACCESSORIES BATTERY RECHARGING and RENTALS s v * t - •Let factory trained mechanics do your servicing. • We will call and deliver your car at no extra cost. ./ :■ ^ ■>V. •.-./V * . te V. Don't Fail To See Our Display of New 1938 Chevrolets on Saturday CUMMINGS CHEVROttl SALES Phone 170. Cedarville, Ohio. I rn g assist heart throbW«0 ,S *w«7 A- Mrs. tern taken Jamestown; Current Cedarville Asan. Cbariss^ Grange, bas| ■- -GwmeCes Mrs, Hut hav# been vl| have retur Y'oungstowhJ Post you stock as tl hand. We ready for dej Miss Isab a teacher ir School, was Hostetler, th Mrs, Cora i spending sev son and daug Jean PattonJ ^ Mr, Wm. '’-farmer, who Hot some tir serious condil The month! ■man’s Club • Miss Ina Ml noon, Nov. n ► V*,;-■. • ■ ■: Mr. Dan Bi field, have re| ' on-Main stre cutter for C. | Mrs- Paul Class enjoyeij last Thursday] Miss Emma Mrs, Walt! •- . Harold, of Lo week with tl brother, Miss] ■>* Murdock, ' The D. A. cakes and gd , : Nqv. llth a| office, opera Messrs. Ch| 1 ing C. \L. - Messrs; ■Fred Raymond Spij '■ . day, where , - - Farms ibr, tlj_ has won the| different mor to add vfour! awarded own! The pheasal 15th and wif The season V year,, which sportsmen. Soma store, 1: *hd Wa . , . an have Here* don’t . without don’t It out on This • ,, bn. leave buy a. pleas# With let’* gv FAlRBkNK) FRIDAY Mid SATURDAY November 5 end 5 PIATUMC Np. 1 “RidingTheLoseTrail Starrinr BOB STEELE I'KATURI NO. * “SeaRacketeers*’ Weldon Heyburn Jeanne fifoddeii j Alwayt % H r Only t ;
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