The Cedarville Herald, Volume 62, Numbers 27-52

CBDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1930 rnstiSm 'S m a * THE C EDA RV I L L E HERALD WAftTH BULL —. - -----------EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Joaoum—KktUail KcJUocUl Atm.; Ohio Kmpaptr Awe.; Miami Valley 1’rww i w . Batered at the Poat Office, Cedarville. Ohio, October 31.1887, Ki tecond clfga matter __ _ ____________ ___ ______ FR IDAY , JUNE 16, 1939 DAVE f REFERENDUM WILL GET NO WHERE Former Governor Martin L. Davey heads a movement to circulate petitions asking for a referendum on a bill passed under the Bricker- administration repealing a Davey law that made the office o f adjutant general, the assistant adjutant general, and assistant quartermaster, life terms. These offices changed with the induction of new governors, Republican or Democratic, for more than fifty years until Davey made the three places life terms, all being his own Democratic appoint­ ments. The present legislature repealed the life term law and Gov. Bricker signed it, there .being no emergency clause at­ tached. It cannot become operative under ninety days and the Davey petitions must be in previous to that date, ■ One, reason why these places should be left to each gover­ nor, no matter Who'he is, is that the adjutant general could if he chose ignore all orders issued by the governor, who could hot remove him for cause. For example suppose we had a governor of the same temper ap Roosevelt, property being damaged or lives lost due to this cause, if the three officials were in sympathy with the union leader, the governor could not preserve order within this own state. There is no sound reason why the old law of permitting each governor to name his own officials to administer such laws as come under that department and are required by the con­ stitution. ' Nothing can be gained by giving three-Democrats life jobs, for the three might not even be in sympathy should some other Democrat than Davey be elected governor in 1940, or at a future date. NEW YORK ATTENDANCE SLIPS. The management of the New York World’s Fair complains of the constantly lower attendance at the fair as the weeks go by, instead of the anticipated increase as predicted weeks ago. It might not be hard to explain why the fair is proving as non-attrdetive with the public as it is. Word soon travels as to how patrons are treated and especially the deep inroad that is made on the private pocketbook of all who attend. Instead of the big show being an educational institution showing the .world’s progress, it seems to be litle short of an A1 Capone racket. The people are willing.to pay a reasonable price for a wanted article' but they refuse to be held up and robbed in broad day light. The labor union racketeers have the big New York show by the throat, Ohio had to produce additional money to complete the state building, due to high labor costs, as much as $20 a day for several lines. Last week the Nevada state exhibit was with­ drawn due to a controversy with union electricians. The build­ ing will not be completed and will remain closed. Several foreign nations have their exhibits in storage waiting for a de­ cision from the fair management as to whether the unions are running the show or the constituted officials. The New York Fair is about the biggest attempt in that . line in the history of the world. Other metropolitan cities have had big exhibits and the patrons have been pleased, especially .was this true in Chicago, where it ran a second year. Under the present management the New York fair will not last the summer unless the labor union racketeers are held in check. We can hope against hope for this change but with the city ., governed by a Socialist New Dealer, not a Democratic' New Dealer, there is little hope that the average citizen can rake up enough coin to finance his way through the fair that the labor unions can collect a toll.on exhibitors that must be handed down to the patrons. Lewis W, Douglass, former Director of the U. S.’ Budget, who could not agree with the Communistic New Dealers about changing the book­ keeping system so often to make government finances look good to the public, and then resigned, was last week elected president o f one o f the largest life insurance companies, in the country. RFD was president or an executive officer o f an assurance company following the World War. Then he-was spending private money. He did not hold the job long; No one has ever heard o f him being of­ fered a private job as executive since He has an alfalfa dryer and cuts the crop day and night, rain or shine. Also » ' dehydrator for oats and wheat to manufacture ‘'dried” milk for his calves, hogs and chickens. While Unde Sain pays him fo r cotton reduc­ tion he has gone Into the livestock business on a big scale and is produc­ ing liis own feed. With hiB farm pro­ fits he has branched out into the bank­ ing business as a director, interested in a hotel and dry goods company. He says farmi rs can make money with diversified crops. John Nance Garner, V, P,, continues to gain momentum in his unannounced campaign for vice president, or the stop Roosevelt third-term movement. In the nation-wide poll ho lias passed Roosevelt. His publicity organiza­ tion queried Democratic newspapers and more than 2,000- replied asking for Garner material. Roosevelt was third. The Tustin, Calif., W. says there is no much C. T. U., word , as lexicon and it is ''cocktail” in their used only with alcoholic drinks, High­ ball and foul-ball are baseball um­ pire terms. Wliat about oyster cock­ tail? The Irish in Cong. Martin L. Swee­ ney, Cleveland, could not be kept under control with" the visit of England’s . ■Royalty to the White House and he sent King George a telegram seeking information about a payment on the World War debt. Roosevelt read the King a few chap­ ters of that famous novel “ Brewster's Millions,” or how to spend other people’s money. ' Sweeney used the New Deal “ boycott and ignored the iocial functions^ Politically speaking Sweeney’s head-.will be on a charger some of these days on the order of King Franklin. The" King and Queen had one treat they had not anticipated. On the hcnic at Hyde Park' there was hot logs, cold ham, gingerbread, beer and toft drinks while across the river vafted Negro spirituals from heaven, ■.he manner in which Father Devine, Negro evangelist, characterizes, his headquarters for his “ sisters.” Eng­ lish Royalty can return home with ho thought that the Roosevelt “ farm” must be in a cosmopolitan neighbor­ hood. ■ ■ Sec. Ickea, the cabinet member that Hugh Johnson said, “ had anta in bia pants,” must know by this time that ho has gome ailment. A leading pic­ ture magazine purchased a story writ­ ten by Ickea, When it was discovered at tfie White House,,Ickea was soon out with a statement that the mag­ azine editors had grabled his story and made changes. The publishers openly denied the statement and this week,will reproduce a photostatic copy along side a reprint o f the first. Sec; Morganthau recently issued a state­ ment on federal tax revision to aid business. In a day or so the White House changed its mind and the. Sec­ retary had to do the same thing, leav- the little three letter word on his door stop. It so happened that othere had The government spent more than a million to convert Alcatraz Island into an escape-proof prison for the worst type of federal criminals. Some of the big shots are there now. Attorney General Frank Murphy wants to re-' been given th e ‘same story by FDR f. <m the prison system. He says A!- The Secretary o f the Treasury has is- catraz is barbarous. If we recall Frank sued no statements since, good or bad. was one of the. CIO governors that _ _ _ _ _ approved the .lt d .™ striked in JHich-. Wolnc, d p , Day, the 162 ignn,.damage to property, and domed anaivcrmiry o f the dw the Continental protection to thousands of auto work- , . . . . . .. . , , . , . , , . , , . Congress ordained that the red, white ers who wanted to work but could not , . „ ,. . ., , , . , . , ., , r . Z ,. T • an“ blue stars aid stripes should be break the Murphy - Roosevelt- Lew,s adopted as the nati6nal bamjer lead p,ckc lines. We suppose Murphy thfi country through the remainder of would do away with stripes and bars. the RpvoluUon< It WRS on June M and tie a blue necktie around the neck m 7 that Woodrow ^ I s o n proclaim. of each prisoner and ***** * ' » to be cd that datc as a holid m church each Sunday, but do as he _______________ pleased six days a week It is the first „ , _____ _______ step for Murphy to liberate A1 Capone, Subscribe to THE HERALD HATCH BILL SHOULD BECOME A LAW Vice President Garner, the keystone to honorable, sensible and honest government, as near as it can be expected under the Roosevelt-Hopkins-Lewis Communistic crowd in Washington, This in encouraging for Garner usually knows what he is talking about. He also is thet outstanding Democratic candidate for presidential nomination and his leadership in both branches of Congress overlaps what comes from the White House. The object of the Hatch law is to put the breaks on much of the public spending, especially that part that is dominated by Democratic politics. There is plenty of evidence that WPA has been directly used for political purposes in Kentucky. Hopkins made grants on political lines, Democratic members of Con­ gress were told more than once from the White House mes senger that there would be no more WPA, AAA, and other federal spending in their states if they did not give in to New Deal demands. Democratic members of Congress are finding things a bit cool at home and it is not so popular to give in a ; every beck and call of Hopkins, Lewis and Roosevelt. The National Economy League issues a statement that in Seven years the New Deal has spent $20,500,000,000 or causec to be spent by federal, state and local agencies, and that some 20,000,000 persons are now on relief payments of some sort, seven million more than were supposed to be unemployed when Roosevelt took office. A congressional committee a few weeks ago reported that the cost Of administering WPA in Ohio was nine per cent of the estimated cost of the project. The law limits the cost to five percent but so many Democratic politicians are on the payroll the Ohio cost exceeds the federal law. Some days* ago we witnessed three highly paid executives talk and argue for thirty minutes over the telephone from the county auditor’s office over a plan of administering a WPA project. We hope Vice President Gamer is right in his prediction that the Hatch bill will be passed. He knows the abuse, waste and graft that has infected WPA and other agencies, money that did not go to those deserving but to the Democratic politicians. ASK THE PAIHTER *Jf* will tell you Mat H anna ' s & ribn sbal slvet * Seiler leaking ftatf men eeenemleel fafet Jeb. ^ y j p i\yr Mailer painters lei! you lliat quality gives satisfaction. Qua!- ity paint contain* beauty, durability, wearability and com­ plete satisfaction. All these you buy when you ask for—* VIANNA’S GREEN SEAL PAINT CEDARVILLE FARM IMPLEMENT, INC. Cedarville, Ohio Much of the wheat in the western i>art o f .Hamilton county was in shock Monday. In the vicinity of Glendale vhere the famous Opejtasit Farms art* ’Ocated we find some of the best wheat -eon thus far this season. While Ham­ ilton county wheat is in. shock there is ijttle, if any wheat even ready to cut n Dearborn county, southern Indiana. - I'his country is very rolling and much i.igher than Hamilton and a different •hnractor of soil. To find wheat cut in Ohio by the 10 and 12 of June is 'unusual. While Robert L. Henry, near Me- ■hanicsburg, Champaign county, gets milch publicity due to the fact that *te has six colts this spring, and five of the six are mare colts. It is his good fortune. Louis Schrader, near Mqoresvilic, Ind., gets twin mules a rare event on any farm. But to make his fortune more attractive as well as unusual, “one o f the twins is a male and the other a female. Mr. Schrader is vocational agriculture teacher. Sec. Wallace has his troubles in-, farm ranks. It has developed that Ed­ ward O’Neal, head o f the American Farm Bureau Federation, has a well organized aid society for the New ■ Deni,. It is charged that Alabama, the home of O’Neal, has been a fertile ground for using AAA agents to round up Farm Bureau members with the hint that the more members we have the more money will be jerked out of the U< S. cash box in Washington, No- j body ever has intimated that the Grange was in on any o f the AAA or Wallace programs. Government franked letters figure in the exposure. The Wallace program has cost the nation most o f its foreign market for cotton Cotton growers arc hot under , the collar. Using franked mail matter j in the campaign is a violation o f the .federal law, a very small mntter to ' Mr. Wallace. ■ Big time farming is having Us har­ vest under the 1939 farm program. Just last week a 10,000 acre farm in Indiana that covered most o f two counties, was sold to Chicago financial interests, It will reduce crops and take a big slice of the federal pay check, We read o f the plan of R. B, Snowden, 42, who did an $30,000 a year business on 834 acres o f Arkan­ sas cotton land. Ho has cut his crop this year to 360 acres and will he paid by the government. He reduced last year planted his crop different and with heavy fertilizer produced 790. pounds to the aero when his former average was only 220 pounds to the nctc. Tbit porfcctlocationfivtayma fcommodalloM at the Palaw will mala your viiit JafegtafA,. V oii H«Bjoy t&tCricVatTarani a fin* nrtawant, cofteadkap cad bar. RATES ThiPAL&CE HOTEL SIXTH AT VINE STREETS ANTHONYELSASSER,MANAGER -A S T IR YOUR NAME-DAD W ILL LOOK FOR OURS** -i; -Vi Your Hear t Belongs To D i II D l I Sunday, June 18th FATHERS DAY Your heart belongs to Daddy— but, your Dad's heart belongs to the Vogue Shop (when he goes shopping for his personal needs) Make these hearts beat as one on Fathers Day, Sunday June 18 th by selecting his gift at the Vogue Shop. / SPORT SUIT ENSEMBLES..................$2.95 to $12.95 BEAU BRUMMEL TIES.......................$1.00 and $1.50 ■; SWANK JEWELRY ..................................50c to $3.50 MANHATTAN AND ARROW SHIRTS.. . . . . ..............................................................$2.00 to $3.50 MANHATTAN PAJAMAS .......$1.95 to $7.50 •SPORTSHIRTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2.00.to $3.50 SPORT SOX AND ANKLETS............ .. .35c and 50e WASH S LA C K S ................................ $1.95 arid $2.95 GOLF CAPS ... ..5 0 c and $1.00 SPORT COATS,.................................. $10.95 to $22.50 FUNN EL S U C K S .................. ....$ 5 .9 5 to $12.00 BOSTONIAN SHO ES .......................'.$4.45 to $10.00 PALM BEACH SUITS.............................$15.50 V c e u e S i c r to and t2 So. Fountain Ave. Springfield* Ohio LEGALNOTICE Mary E. Endsley, whose place o f residence is unknown, will take notice that on the Eth day o f May, 1939, Ross E. Endsley filed his certain ac­ tion against her for divorce on the grounds o f wilful absence for three years in CaBe No. 21952, before the Common Pleas Court o f Greene County, Ohio. That said cause will come on fo r hearing on or after the 17th day o f June, 1939, and she must answer before that date or judgment may be rendered against her. MARCUS SHOUP, Attorney for Plaintiff. (5-12-6-16-6t) LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 204. ROLL* FILMS Developed and Printed 25c 24-Hour Service Give Me An Order Vincent Rigio Xenia Avenue , . . } Dr. H. N . Williams DENTIST Yellow Springs, Ohio X-RAY EQUIPMENT A NAME THAT STANDS FOR GOOD FURNITURE BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE Adair’s N„ Detroit 8t. Xenia, O. THE S00L SPOT ISO Til Beatrice W ind ow , wnose place of residence is unknown, will take notice* that on the 20th day o f May, 1939, Albert Whitelow filed fils petition for divorce against her on the grounds o f wilful absence for three years, being Case No. 21,961, before the Court o f Common Pleas, Greene county, Ohio, and that said cause will come on fo r hearing on or after July 1, 1939. FOREST DUNKLE, Attorney for Plaintiff. (f>-26-6t-7-l) FrL—S a t , Thrill K ites "Calling Or. Kildare"5 Law Ayr>» <1U h |UB!I!1*L_ Starts Sunday three day * V < $ PROVIDING FOR THE ORGAN­ IZATION OF THE FIRE DEPART­ MENT AND REGULATION OF THE COMPENSATION. BE IT ORDAINED by the Council of the Village of Cedarville State of Ohio: SECTION 1. That the Fire Depart­ ment o f the Village o f Cedarville Ohio shall be composed o f the follow­ ing officers and men who shall receive compensation hereinafter provided, payable semi-monthly. SECTION 2. The Mayor shall ap­ point, with the advice and consent of the council, the head of the Fire De­ partment, who shall be the fire chief, and who shall continue in office until removed therefrom for the causes and under the powers and procedure pro­ vided for in Section 4265 to 5267 in­ clusive, of the General Code of Ohio. SECTION 3. The Fire Department shall consist o f 5 firemen in addition to the fire chief, who shall be appoint­ ed by the Mayor with the advice and consent of the council, and shall con­ tinue in office until removed therefrom for the causes and under the powers and procedure as provided for by Sec­ tion 4263 to' 4267 inclusive, o f the Gen­ eral Code o f Ohio. 1 •SECTION ,4. The Fire Chief shall receive as compensation Two and One-* half ($2.50) Dollars for each and every fire attended by him and all firemen, whether regular or Volunteer firemen, shall receive as compensation One ($1.00) Dollar for the first hour or part thereof, and in addition there­ to, for every hour or part ■ thereof trereafter, the sum o f Fifty (50c) Cents, for their services fox* each run, and services rendered at each fire. SECTION. 5. The Fire Chief may designate one o f said firemen as his assistant, and shall instruct the fire­ men as to their particular duties. The Fire Chief may change the duties o f the firemen from time to time. SECTION 6. All volunteer firemen shall be under the jurisdiction and supervision o f the Fire Chief who may certify such volunteer firemen as to the amount o f compensation to be re­ ceived based upon Section 4 o f this ordinance, subject however to the ap­ proval o f the council. _ SECTION 7. That all ordinances in conflict herewith be and the same are hereby repealed. SECTION 8. -This ordinance shall fake effect and be in force from and after the earliest period allowed by low. • PASSED this 5th day o f June, 1939. C. H. CROUSE, President o f Village Council. Attest: PIERRE J. McCORKELL, Clerk “ Only Angels Have Wings” Extra! Peto Smith Short — Metro News MAJESTIC "G rade Allen Murder Case” • With Grade Allen Warren- .Williams Eileen Drew * Also Cartoon— Travelogue and Pathe News ffl FAIRBANKS Double Features North o f Yukon with Charles Starrett TWA /SUN . I MON. BIG HITS VTUES". BOB BURN8 "Pm From Missouri” "Join the Marines” T h * ’ Pick o f Th« Pictures, F. 1* NELSON, O. D. . OPTOMETRIST JatMestown, Ohio Especial Attention Given School-Aye «ye» h t TH1 KXEALD Local Mx*. Joe W< teach in lin­ stock, O,, tin Rev. W, A. and son, Rui visited Tuesdx brother-in-law Mrs. Williai Thursday to tl men's Club. Mrs. M. A. W. Galloway to Huntington, o f the foi'mer For Sale Deering binder Cedarville. Fr R. R. 1. We arc* info eldest son of R and wife, On breakdown in trouble. THE 0 0 L SPOT Nites ay Word has bet critical illness her home in Cl former resident sister of Mrs; Mx\ Ralph Mv Ina, entertaine; Marshall and f Fi’ank Reid of Annabel Murdo day- for dinner. LIVESTOI _J-un« Basis Columbus less trucking an<i 15 cents 160-180 lbs. 180-200 lbs. 200-225 lbs. 225-250 lbs! - 250-275 lbs. ■ Spring land FRANK Ph. n ?» da mt iur 2 OR 3-P11 1 OR 2-PI1 DR1 is i LAD II MEN. ■ 4 _______ Cl Prices ( At Yo SW*FN HIG HOGS, CA XENIA GREENl c O. D. 0 ~ 3T z liven Y 1 tALD t i

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