The Cedarville Herald, Volume 61, Numbers 1-26

'« I i f { I mmJkagjtmMM ii'ito tii i ' .... t . merer m. m * C R P A R V U L t H I I A L P C M B jl H U . ------------ — *WTO* AMD PUBU rg* MUal Valta* Ofltea, C ed trriA i Ohio, October 81,1887, fcUDAY, MARCH 2 i, 1988 m G A i r S MEAD OR ROOREVELT CHARGER Tte %mmp **t ft tte « • i*4 wtthte i tte Unmsemtk taak* to to# county : m*r to catted w ftftw te* a* a fc c itt of Him rMignntion of dm irann Hoinor 1Hear*. who to*la* cforfc of On bow* of otoettoni, F»p* royorto wo teae [front tte lurid* tte** mm oboot thro# | contending farttow, oil of whom was* mot* or Is** dtoonttoftod with ft* chairmen. Wten Honrto fitw nccoptod toodonhip he took on th* tow* too* of ' politic* «nd no » tenderfoot attempt ed to toil ft* old head* what ihey bad f t do. Hi* tornd carried Mm beyond k mime" « u written in th# Franklin I). Rooae- writ n r i r i #8 kia "wayside court” ba tting wherein ha as jufif#, jw y gad pnaacqto r found A rthur E. Morgan, head of th# ToNtfaaaa Vallay Authority, guilty of "aoutumaey,’' scorn or eoadompt, for on# who iagally or through persons! malic# a»- suaras authority aa dictatorship oyar oaa or more who refuse to acespt or obay a command, whethar endowed with legal au­ thority o r n o t Morgan, as chief of a th rss member board of the Naw Dsal socialistic experiment, disagreed with his fellow members oa not only policy but payment of claims that he regarded as illegal and unjust, u addition he opposed the S 006,000 claim fo r a supposed marbl# deposit under Norris a , all of which Roosevelt End* said Morgan has refused to Co-eporate with the majority. Roosevelt held two “wayside court” hearings demanding th a t Morgan withdraw his charges and lay a ll proof on the tab le, thus giving the “majority” time to Ex up a story before the investigation could be opened by Congress, the only body th a t had power to remove Morgan or any other member legally if found guilty, The power assumed by Jteosevelt in th is phony bearing was from th e same source th a t H itler has used in Europe to frigh ten smaller nations to come within his fold or be wiped o u t * The whole disgraceful performance was fo r no other pur­ pose than laying ground work fo r the protection of Sen. George Berry, Tenn., who attempted to collect fo r a supposed deposit of marble. Morgan was tfie only member to protest payment j of several millions, thus winning the enmity of th e New Healers, | ,h* £ te aid not est ,Berry is a labor union leader and was appointed by Gov. Brown- j SfautHct h* woui<n* ing, Tenn., on demand of Roosevelt There will no doubt he l iS f iS ? sS tiSojW tt ted been both court proceedings following the sham hearing conducted by Roosevelt and a congressional investigation as well, either ^ * * vri tte fteE o rbo th b em , r e n t e d fey C h .irm .n Ho,*™ , . T ha t local readers can have some idea of how southern j ?ollow;ng the signing of ft* tow by Democratic papem back A rthu r Morgan, we reprm t an ed it KooMveft> H« ststod that he ted orial from th e Mobile, Ala,, Press Register, which appeared1 Match 13th following the first Roosevelt hearing: his footsteps snd h* attempted to to»- jjeiuh Sheriff Henkel, D*«w Hew for his resignation will go towards has!' ing th* old sores cannot he estimated at this tiro*. Two weeks sgo toefc Monday we heard Cong, Mark Wilcox, Fourth Florida district, in his opening speech for Senator in opposition to Sen. Pep­ per, In the city psrk in Pensacola, Florida. A crowd of 350 or toore itard what northern peoplewould say was a first class Republican speech Wilcoxopened his speech with the statement that he did not approve of , v '/• ; * ^ F F W I P B h i s H b a d ” . ?* v, -• r / ' / - : > \ . 1 \ The many-sided. Mr. Roosevelt essayed the roles of jury, judge . and Lord High Executioner at the conference (that wa*the Presi­ dent* word for the extraordinary occasion) between himself snd1 the threo TVAcommissioners. In the triple role of jury, judge Snd, herd High Executioner, Mr,* Rooseveltfound Dr, A, E. Morgan - guilty, passed sentenceupon him and briskly cut off his head. Thefact that Dr.Morganremains alire and guilty, in theopinionv of many of us, only of doinghis duty is otgittg to the fortunate cir­ cumstance that Mr. Roosevelt lacks the authority to act as judge pr jury or Lord High Executioner, Dr. Morgan still has the right *hd. ' theopportunity, to appeal f t the epurtmfpublic opinion. He also has gte chance, though perhaps i t is not a very good one, f t take hi* casebefore Congress, which alone has the authority to passsentence - , ' on the remarkableesse of the TVA. . ' ' - . -^ , -v ‘\ V \ ' Dr.Morgan came off very welt indeed in the star chamber pro:, ;seeding*in ft# WhiteHouse. In the. face of Mr. Rooseveltf# intran- sigeance he conducted himself with patience and dignity. He never one#tost his temper and he dung with gallant tenacity to the single" ' point hewanted to make. -That point—and it seems unassailable—is • that in viewof a number of exceedingly suspicious and disturbing events, Congress should inquire exhaustively into the operations of the TVA by the commission's majority. ' Mr. Roosevelt's repeated cry of "Facts!" struck many of us as * sounding vety like the queen’s cry of"Off with his head!" to "Alice' In Wonderland.” Mr.Roosevelt aa*u«*dlykn*w that the comptroller ' general'* office, with facilities much greater than either his' or Dr. / Morgan's, has not yet completed its investigation of TVA expend­ itures, hut that it fears that the TVA has spent a .mere $5,000,000 illegally. To the Rooseveltmind, moreover, a policy is not# “fact”; ; that the TVA was ostensibly set up f t do one thing end has been, according to Dr. Morgan, doing something entirely different, inter­ ested the Fresident not all. What doe* interest the President to jockeyingHr. Morgan into* position inWhichthe chairman willhave f t resign. Hie president was certainly not immediately successful to his ‘cettve; Dr, Morgan, onFriday, did not,resign. Dus uis resignation,and not the facts shout TV$, is undoubtedly . the Roosevelt objective. If Mr, Roosevelt reallywanted the facts, he he would agree cordially with Dr, Morgan's recommendations for a. congressional Inquiry. If that to the way f t get the facts about monopolies, it should alsobe the wayf t get the facts about the TVA. But for some reason, Mr. Roosevelt says it isn't. It would be inter­ esting to hav*the President setforth the nsisonwith the samedirect­ ness with which he urged Mr. Morgan ft give,the "facts," Oh# of the things yet unreported to ju s t how much money I did the dancer# contribute to the President*# ball in the nation? Any other report# o f » financial nature on how these funds have j been managed in th e past would be of interest to the public. I t was repression now its Recession ; it was inflation, now it is reflation; then we sterilised gold to check reproduction; Webster call# th a t fruitless or barren ; we may next have par­ entless dollar# a# a result of desterilization. secured mor#,than 17,000,000 for his district, which to leas than on*fourth th* six# of the SeventhDhio District. He admitted no on* knew when this spendingwould stop or what the con­ sequences would he when it did stop hut all admitted the end would wring on,disaster of some kind. t . C h ic k Season Wa Rell Embiyo'Oftfcta, all kind^ one day, oneweekor twoweeks old* COME m AND LETS T AIK OHICKEjL SprlnMPigflsGet startedonForina’sprogram QITALIfY GRASS SEED, € 0 AI* FEED and mm irnFM # . ■ Seens toTest your Soil before orderingyour Spring Fertiliser* FABROWIMfi TIME Utua figureyourHgandHogFhowfor your Free Stmtena withEvery Order of tlhlcks in feeding your hog*, cattle and poultry. C. L.McGuinn TT m *Pii-Rj-Na Sfmw C r is rv ilK O , Wilcox afso stated that he opposed fte'eoutf packing pi*n, th* limitation | .for fixed hours of labor and .Wage#; anda long listofether bills. Andwa* he opposed to th* lynching bill? H# openly stated he would be cut off the 1 list' if he did not support ft# court packing plan. He charged that on :;hat day the administration to Wash- ’figton had sent nut 150 men and wo­ men from Jacksonville, Fit,, and that two of, them were to Pensacola, f t 1make a surveyof WPAwork. He arid their duty was to interview each man orwoman on the publie peyroli, relief and old age pensioner, and check just how each one would vote, and were I warned that if they did hot vote for .Sen* Pepper they tW<wdd be dropped. 'He,openly charged the*# were aom* [ten or a dozen women insepetnrs to Pensacola, being paid $160 a month and expenses, to check .Up on who should get relief and what women should get job# to the sewing rooms, where these unfortunate unemployed [couldnotdrawmore than $30a month to other words,each inspector collect' edasmucheachmonthas wa*sllowet .five women. He’condemned the ad* ministration method of placing men ind women politicians in such jobs f t eat up the fond* set aside for the un­ fortunate, Wilcox spoke»s a RepuMi- dn would to Greene county and hi* charges against hi* own party were just as vicious a* can be heard north tof the Ohio river. From where we stood there could beSeenbut twonegro#*and notknow- tog the gentleman a t our right W» remarked that many colored people attended political meetings up North, The neighbor s*id to a moderate tone that was heard by a doxen or mom persons, "Why they are a t home read­ ing the preamble f t tte constitution so they can expiate ft f t the election judge before they can vote." This brought a laugh from several and the gent at our left said, “you aUmus he from up North, but you to right," The gent at our right was fromPekin, m ' Only » Urn « m U i . 6a* af ft* cfcf m crowd*# wit# a « m M*** tw*wty-av* mi thesu#*to. It was ■tuft trll trUunj d th* MtoftitotmtSMw *n« a CJO barter Wh*did **t know wte te wa* t% adarttSsd noawftlim, wss k*t If % uw ik would iSjdisis •vwytMag ov*r f t fth a L. mwhf, *v*ryftiag w««U fton f t on the boom, W* amd* f ts aequstoftnee of a ■Numftctum tmsB ( fttrd t while in Pwwaeela. B* admHsad te wa* Msk< t * u r n ; f«r a lacstion to move bk iwsrtlg p h a t frost hi* why H< ataftd Shut two iHffmwtl mhs U cities t e d • f f a r r i f t m m h - d rift* y 6 f t* •ad tea** ft** for t*a fmn. His odWtpnay estpiaf** 136 awn « a* to known «* ono o f tteoo fomily-ownod corporatioas that Roosevelt wanted f t tax o«t of «xi*San*s. Ho staftd his company paid t te government *T per coat of tho not profit last year along with asvsral o tte r fedora! and state corporation taxes. The five members o f the company oaeh te d $600 as their share of the profit# a fte r paying Unde 8am, CIOwage* to Detroit was the burden-mid the thing th a t was forcing the company f t locate else, where, A plant on a waterway for shipping could,under southern wage scales produce tte identical casting to tte south, ship them north to Balti­ more and then freigh t f t D etroit,:for fast than they could t e mad* in He- tro it and trucked f t another factory to th a t city. V * Suggested Ohio a* a good stopping place but the "noth­ ing doing" sign was .hung up im- immcdtetely. I t will in ftrest Ohio people to know th at we have several cities that make millions o f tin fru it cans. T teA ts t.tin p laft ever made south o f tte Ohio Tiver left Birming­ ham some weeks ago fo r Tampa, Fla, where a new can factory will supply the Florida canning factories. Here­ tofore tin (daft has never been made south of Pittsburgh; - '.■-•tetelSftBmjgd IT.-,■. . '.-.Ajir . ' f , ,r*1 'W, , •“ .( We get back home and tte Erst en­ couraging hews we hear is that In temational Harvester laidoff 750 men lis t Saturday and put what was left on a 4' day basis.- Then this week news reaches us that tte larg-, Ost plants to Dayton will be­ gin f t reduce the pay rolls due ft lackof order# andwith largestocks of finished products on tend unsold Dayby d*ywe seem ft te pulling our­ selvesoutjjf tte Roosevelt tend made panic right toft a 76c wheat market. if ft* lueeaftls. t* IU««IU rrn Si* CtAUMOtS. days Sgo te’ 'SMuft ptat* his r*ii*f w n fw tq m ft* I*qsurer, di*cue*io* mueiftg rtitof toll Um mi4: am not w, muck comewaod akoot anoo^MH/ lUMmpioytto m 1 mm i futw* for tte IM /m jm *f ctti**n* that coasUtuft our meat,” Sou- BatWy ftouid te eo*ce«»*d shout tte *>■*■< treaty tetweea tte HewDeal, and Wrmm that by on* advaaet Germaay aad Italy, eaa plunge nation to war. t o "I tte UP0B9OF8ALR , Mate* tt. 1M6 U,« ififtak. Aria*Cw EOG8—am immim in*, laa-rn iu 3V6-3M lb* M6 lb*, up Ift-iao lb* 19A146 to*. 106-11# lb* Heavy *ow* Light sows , .0,16 ft ,§M .•JO 0J6 mi US tew*. Hwmy fJO ae4 1,n, am at #J0 aad 0J0. ft tte pftd ri».**-«-' ' this P9ALMOF 1030 The President is my step«rd, I am in want; He msketh me to lie down oe park - benetes; He lcacjeth me betide still feetori**; He diUurbetit my »ouL !e ieadeih me in tiw path of teatrac­ tion for tte party's sate. Yet, Tte I walk thru tte valley of tte shadow of recession, I anticipate no recovery, for He is ..with me. ; Hepreparetha deduction tomy salary to the presence of min* creditors. He amuuoteth my small income with taxes; My expense runneth over. Surely unemployment andf poverty shall, followme ah thedays of my life, * And I shall diwell to a mortgaged house forever. CHARLES MIFF, ? Chicago,. III. mscribe ib “THE HERALD” , . J H f t 3JK . .0.10 JT,46 ft 7.7.76 -,-iuo t* *10 «>6J# Tiaaftd pig* - - - - - - — 9M tewn uatraaftd p ig s........., . Jk70 tew* 8HEKP A LAMMMW tead, Geod aad ctekw lambs --3-10 Medium lamb* »..-~--~7.6# ft 3J0 tefo f t 4J6 CATTLE-144 tead. Steers , —f J 6 ft 7 A 6 Go*d heifer* . . . --------- 6.16 to 6J6 Como.on heifers ....M l te d l Fa* cow# 686 to. 6J6 Medium rows ... ----- - , - 410 to 6,00 Cutter cow* —.3.46 f t 4,00 Butcher bulls - . 0.30 ft 0.36 Breeding boll* - |X5 ft $66 Milk cows' $36 f t $67 Rang reactors .$4.40 ft $6,10 VEAL CALVES—148 tead. Top calves ----------- $0,00 Top medium 16.20 to 10.40 Jxtwmedium and culls _.„S,90 down Live stock price* were lower to all department* today, compared with last week, Tte ftp on hogs was 0.30, or $5 cents tower than a week ago. This price was paid for a deck load of weight* averaging167 lbs., while 0.30 and 8.25 was paid freely for weights ranging from 18$ ft 27$ lbs. Lighter from TOO f t 7J0. eaahadat 4A0 ate 4J6. Cettftcf ft* lOaaaftftwa ■ale m»kg «t TJiO, ftfosvJ at OJA Baft f*i *ww* te III* *al* **ld fro* 6J6 f t 6JK, ate aMdia* eaw* fro* 4JO to MO. Reel bulls Mid fm* «J0 ft CJ6, feaag fwaeters w*ro f t gate gaeltty •*4 sold fir** 4.40 f t 6.16;V«*l ealvs* was* 60 «*aft ftw*r vHk top prie* of ft JO paid fdr choie* 100 lb. vwfciefi, T#j» nwdft* grads* from 10JO f t 10.40, and lew medium and culia at 8J0 down, WILLIAM GILBERT WILL JUDGE FLOWER SHOW William Gilbert, son of Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Gilbert, tea te*» select­ ed as one of three of his da#* at O, S. U. to te * judge at the Toronto, Canada, flower show The three will have all expense! paid as gumte of the show. Mr. Gilbert is a senior and is majoring dii horticulture and land­ scape architecture. ., Dr. H. N. Williams DENTIST YeRaw Springs, Obi* X-RAY EQUIPMENT p m u i K s e ra a ra n n -iB s a o r y o n m m y a o t S m /9 w « f / ‘4 e m m . . s u i m - Sen. Bailey. Dem., North Carolina^ certainly eouWte charged with heresy CEDARVILLE farm IMPLEMENT, Die. Ptem# 7B- \ ■>^ ^ ;; _ South Main Straat - V iA lv ic iw f S££ o a k 4 iM Y SAY/N6 P £ T k A T i O f f T 25 J& tjia ... People in the. south ate much con­ cerned over the future of business, They are now feeling the firth pinch 6f the latest! Roosevelt; •depression, At that the south, to better off than tho north and to tte smaller cities everything, to tetter than to title# like New Orleans, Mobile, Montgonv ery, Birmingham, , Ni*hvHle> eft,; Many at the new textile factories, from the north have teen located to towns of 1200 te 8800, Most alt of the newpaper milts are nearby small­ er titles. The palp mills for kraft paper would rail west any town is tte pine pulp Is prepared with sul­ phuric add, As we approached the great will at FanaW* t'ity* even when; a mile an one-telf away it was airy to dose the tar window# m a warm d*y nr choke m ite *tid fum*a, At tte you do ant notice the •rid for tte fume 1 * fert*d % draft up a stack 125 feet high, The.wind then carries tte fumes and it eventu­ ally settles acme distant from the pl«nt wh'ch to from three ta five miles from town, Tte Xantealtnation exist­ ed at plants we visited at Moss Feint,, Mis*, New riftoansj Mobile and otter titles, The daily average n< fintoted ptteuci; m most of tte*e mills nm* atows ftna astii., tf# m Rttm. togham, Al* , -jha HargMit tiulnatrftt Htf of tin**opth, ■yr*) found ft.000 *t**l worker* tte t had te«a nut; of Wmh ★ Wicaql *#ai«n ■ f 1 i V SHOP fr.an t *select 8 ©Af G . Si foroutd S tee wil c tests d riot aw tti land c ■ • di St ^ . w , b: w - f c ' '■ • k -.■-:-'' v ’.“^ mii nt*a *■‘vu . 1 pun nii>. .... 'AARs"™ - e<f to• lifi, |J ,.I... , •sJOountinn {•. thn- i) i.n Wi '92 m 1At N lit 4 • l;i . th t-r . n ; fr. i b', *■“v’ M‘ , A- ’’ Ihu - nu * i'l Kill1 tor ■' IT pif • ■de rt'fi. , \,fS •. r—r i ; * # - s, .. . • ;■/. \ A '£ ! RC tD > * - . ^. *- . R. :0 « I - i a v .- n cj . L.. “ i*0 ?J \ - ■. GR r t* V. \'.C *i “ . m . S C I ' ' AS fOHDA Wmmr n r 1 Jfsr, 'm / ‘■i F A I R B 4 N K 4 LOOK! EXTRA! OX OUR SWAGS! ~ IN PSRSON FRIDAY, March25-One Day Onto M N W ) VA IJ.K T BARN DANCK - G rM to l B S W r «M«r «n MH h iwtimwi U S » rte c fkM w itk g a illft troop#- Cmm € rm k Glvfg, Aaoil I # w a * e n t iw i m i m m m « t R fffnlgr Dow F r fe tf ! WMMMAMT kKMUHV* Masaaiy Mary Oftgulr* : •S i

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