The Cedarville Herald, Volume 62, Numbers 27-52
CEB.YRVIUJS HBSEALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1IM T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D ] i : nv T t t i : t » 1 r-r■lr|,il- 1li''ir,rn MTtvmAW a \m m i i i r t o o t d KARLH BULL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER U P B U B -R t tlw l MU«rti4 Xuoa.i Ohio Ntwmwper AMdC.J Wwul Valley Pr«w Aawc. Entered at the Pqst Office, Cedarville, Ohio, - October 31,1887,fTts second class matter. FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1939 DID ROOSEVELT APPROVE REMARKS BY JOHN L. LEWIS One of the truly great speeches that have been made in Washington during the era o f the New Deal, one that should have a place in the coming Roosevelt Library at Hyde Park, was the attach of John L. Lewis, head of the CIO Communistic movement in the nation, on Vice President John N. Gamer. Much fog has been turned loose down in Washington at times to hide the real meaning of New Deal movements. This has blinded the congress as well as the nation. It was done for a purpose knowing that with disturbed public mind things could be accomplished as if there had been a division of tongues as o f old. Nothing has happened to draw a more definite line between the New Dealers, CIO, Communists, and the real Democrats, than what Lewis had to say about Garner being “ a vile old man, a whiskey drinker and'a poker player.” The Republicans were as much shocked at the attack as were Gamer’s support ers, the constitutional Democrats. For months Garner has been a sore spot among the New Dealers, including Roosevelt himself. Many of the fanatical New Deal bills in Congress have been defeated or so changed that the intent was blotted out. This .inflamed leaders such as Roosevelt, Lewis and others. It is generally believed- that Roosevelt knew before hand of what Lewis was to say and after it was said the assumption must be that he gave passive approval at least. The feeling between the two executive heads of the government has grown into a personal animosity on the part of Roosevelt, and members of Congress in the clos ing days of the session are voting against most of the New Dea measures. Roosevelt has named Paul McNutt to head the social secur ity administration to keep him in line for the presidentia nomination, in case Roosevelt cannot get a third term, A1 surveys have given Gamer the lead in poll, votes, sit will be interesting to watch future polls as to how much gain will be given Garner in view o f the Lewis attack. MEDICAL PROFESSION WILL GO FORWARD The recent deaths of Drs. William and Charles Mayo, founders of the famous Mayo clinic in Rochester, Minn., brings to mind that as great as these men were in the medical world there came a time when human effort fails to retain or restore fire. However great the loss of these two minds will be to a suffering public their contribution in medicine and surgery will keep their names fresh for generations to come. Their work will be carried oft by those who remain and the ■ little of their personal financial reward used is a mere pittance to what has been left for foundation work and con tinuance of the clinic. The New York Times editorially speaks of the death of these two brothers: ■ ’ , • “ Dr. William survived his younger brother, Dr. Charles, by only two months. Bom of .a line of physicians, sons of a noble father, they were consummate artists in their great art. They were one in their marvelous skill, their disinterested service and their public benefactions. William was a child of 2 when the. family settled in .a “ primitive” little hamlet in Southeastern Minnesota. It will be fifty years next Fall since the Mayo Clinic was opened. Its staff then consisted of the elder Dr, Mayo and his two sons. Now Rochester and its clinic are known over the world. The staff ismow of more than five hundred. A generation ago Sir Henry Burdett was dreaming of a “ Hos pital City.” The Mayos have made his dream a reality. “ It, is not only a, medical center but an advanced medical school, part o f the University of Minnesota. It is a clearing house for surgical information. The Mayo Clinic from its first and poorest days adapted its bills to the purse of its patients and has taken no money from charitable institutions.. It be came so famous for diagnosis and operation that money flowed in. In 1915 the brothers gave $1,500,000 to establish the Mayo Foundation. “ We never regarded the money as ours,” said Dr. William. “ This money came from the people, and we believe, my brother and myself, that it should go back to the people.” “ These men who have done so much to enrich science, to diminish pain and to prolong life, leave much more behind them than famous names. Their works do follow them. Their prac tice is continued in their. Foundation. If the tornado of 1883 in Rochester was the origin of the Mayo Clinic, that storm has turned into a wind of healing that will not cease.” We notice where Madison, Jnd., a small city on the Ohio river, haa at tracted a shoe factory from Cincinnati. The citizens raised $15,000 to pay shipping charges installation o f the machinery. The plant will give em ployment to 200 men and women. With such a pay roll the $15,000 in vestment will come back to the busi ness men many times in the next ten years, Y. P. Gamer may be a poker player and if so we venture is a good one and that he plays only with his own money at gtake. The White House game is staked with everyone’s money in a sure loss. Not so long ago Lebanon, a neigh boring county seat o f Warren stag ed a successful campaign to raise $10,- 000 to make it possible to retain a successful shoe manufacturing con cern that had a big pay roll. To lose .the company would cost the business interests many times ten thousand the first year. Xenia merchants under write the rental o f a factory building to house a manufacturing concern, Other towns do the same thing to at tract industry. When everything Is going along and the “ gOose hangs high” as we say, few ever stop to think that such will not always be. It is only when we get our backs against the wall that we do our real thinking, and then it is frequently too late. The south has taken many of the northern industries from our towns and cities, either di rectly or by competition being so keen the northern company had to go out of business. The south has cheap labor and plenty of it. It has cheaper build ing materials and less restriction on industrial management. It has a vast amount o f raw products. In most states towns and cities can eliminate all city and school taxes to attract industry for a number o f years. In Ohio particularity, we have a hidebound constitution that makes it possible to tax the average citizen to the point of burden and at the same time drive industry elsewhere. Ohio cities Can not offer, some o f the free advantage other states permit. The cheapest thing any town or city can do is to give free taxes to new industry for a ten .or twenty year'period. Canada permits such offers and millions upon millions o f American dollars have been invested in industry in that country. If Cedarville could offer free taxes to some industry for ten or twenty years, che New Deal monument on west Xenia avenue could be restored to an industrial life. There is much whispering in poli tical circles in the county as to what is holding up the appointment o f post master in Yellow Springs. A civil service examination was. held months ago and three highest certified but no appointment comes out o f Washing ton, regardless o f the fact other Ohio appointments have been made. There, is a rumor in circulation at the county scat that another examination has been called. This is unusual unless some Republican had grades that crowded out a favorite Democrat. The Yellow Springs situation has developed a lot o f talk at the county seat. It was very noticable during the Davey administration no Republi cans ever reached first place in grades. If .so there was always a Davey- crat in the list and even he was not named without the endorsement o f the county committee where the office was to be filled or from which the ap plicant came. It is also evident that' the Democrats do not want the same rules in use by the Bricker administra tion. They imagine that Bricker should appoint Democrats but that is ItftW/lltOVtAaaiViln DnmiMiaaina •4 to oppom th* referendum the Daveycrata have under way. The Ohio Civil Service Council, comprising 82 groups, recently opposed the refureiy dum and approved the uqw. When Gov. Bricker stated his administration had dropped 3,600 useless appointees as a matter, o f economy it will take some argument from the Daveycrata to prove the ousted should be on the pay roll. The Republicans have been more than lenient with the dusted Davey appointees. I f the .Democrats want some action Goy, Bricker should au thorize the publication o f the Davey appointees that were on the pay roll twice each month, one in one depart ment and one in another. You would be surprised to learn juct who some o f the Ohio Democrats were fhat had one job and drew pay from two different departments. Rural Homemakers T. m'Z: Refrigerator Aids Springfield, and eight grandchildren and two great grandchildren. ' The funeral services were held from the Zimmerman funeral home in S. Charleston and interment in the Selma Methodist Church Cemetery. When .Junior refuses to drink his milk because it is warm, when yes terday’s food spoils, or when the imorning’s picking o f vegetables looks ' bedraggled, it’s time fo r homemakers ______ •to get the cold facts about mechanical On the basis o f $1,615.54 compro- " ^ r a t i o n , says Thelma Beall, home CASE COMPROMISED mise payment, settlement o f a damage management specialist, Ohio State claim arising from the injury o f Na- ‘ University. talie Anne Bennett, 6, o f Knollwood, The eyen cold o f a refrigerator Following defeat in congress o f the Roosevelt foreign treaty plan, FDR is sued a press statement fhat there was evidence that business would suffer due to failure to pass the act. He also said he had an interview with a '“ big” business man, not naming him, and that both came to the same conclusion. Here is what the newspapers carried the next day, following Roosevelt's statement: “ Favorable News Pushes Stocks Ahead One to Three Points’,” market page headline in Gov. Cox's Springfield Sun. “ Stock List Stages Brisk Advance; Bonds Climb Follow ing Peace News,” from, the Cincinnati Enquirer. Both articles referred to defeat o f neutrality act which meant this nation would not mix at present in the European mess. by probate court on application o f the child's guardian, Cora Bennett. The little girl, attempting to cross the ice-cpated highway to a grocery aty.“,,IC ,",,^ct3 *ne.° Knollwood, darted in front o f an auto ?,?' ; U8“ a y [s driven by Herman Fisher, Xenia fire!11,68 ’ — buy ■ chief, suffering a broken right leg and other injuries. Although the accident was considered unavoidable, the $1,616 .14 payment was offered by Fisher. The Hatch bill passed by a group o f Democrats and Republicans has been signed by FDR and is now a law. After months, of debate1conservative leadership in both houses won against administration opposition. Had the bill been vetoed it would have been passed over the White House opposi tion. Nothing made this more cer tain than the part John L. Lewis play ed in attacking Vice President Garner. Republicans regard this bill a great victory' and Democrats that oppose the New Deal do likov. ise. It forbids such acts as Roosevelt and his purge methods against Democratic congress men and senators that dared oppose his brain-truster bills. All the Re publicans have to do'now is to check Democratic activities a t the next elec tion—when a Republican president will take his seat the following Jan uary. ****"ta"ta 'm The Hamilton county Republican committee on Wednesday endorsed ’ Senator Robert A. Taft as a candidate1 for president on the Republican ticket, as Ohio’s favorite son. There wiil be no contest between the Taft and Bricker forces in the presidential primary. The Governor o f course will have no opposition on his side at the primary. Unless the Democrats do a better job of “ uniting opposing fac tions” than what happened in Colum bus at the love-feast last Saturday, Goy. Bricker will have easy sailing. Both Davey and Sawyer were absent but their ghoBts paraded at the Sat urday meet with daggers up their sleeves. The boasted attendance o f 25,000 dropped to less than 5,000, a mere handful for the big coliseum on the fairgrounds. Vandervoort Breaks London Prison Farm Louis C. Vandervoort, 86, James town, who has been serving life term for the second degree murder o f a Wilmington officer sixteen years ago, broke from London prison farm early Wednesday morning, with three other prisoners. A bar over a hospital window was cut with a blow torch. Vandervoort had applied twice in recent years for parole but Wilming ton officials protested and the paroles would be continued. He had also figured in several Jamestown burglar ies previous to the killing o f the of ficer. ■ . Dayton-Xenia Fike, when struck by an “ *k68.it p68sible to k6ep * ? d? 800J auto Jan. 15, 1939, has been approved co^ t,on f ° r » nUmber ?* dayB anJ salad vegetables may be prepared fo r several meals ahead itnd still re tain. their crispness and color. Since size affects the operating cost but fit- wise fo r farm fa n - least a seven-cubic- foot box. Miss Beall says refrigeration in the farm, home is even more important than it is in the city home. House wives, can buy food in larger quan- tites and thus realize a saving. Then, too, when she has an electric refri gerator, the busy homemaker doesn’t have to dash to town for supplies oh the day she has to feed the threshers simply because she had no cool place to keep food overnight For services rendered, the refrig erator puts in a very small monthly statement. If electric current is five cents per kilowatt hours, the cost o f operation will be $1J>0 to $j2 per month. The consumption o f current can be lessened if space is left around the refrigerator so it can “ breathe." The inside of the cabinet should be finished with porcelain enamel, as it is rust-resistant, not affected by al kalies, easy to clean, and extremely durable. A synthetic finish for the outside is satisfactory. All hardware should be rustproof, and freezing units made o f metal alloys are more durable than those finished in porce lain enamel. Sufficient freezing space is more important than the number o f ice cubes a refrigerator can make, Many boxes have special features having no value so far as refrigera tion is concerned; and only add un necessarily to the cost. These feat-- CELEBRATES SIXTH BIRTHDAY WITH PARTY Janet Gordon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gordon, o f Cedarville, observed her sixth birthday Monday, wns hostess to.a group o f playmates at n delightful party.at her home 'Mon day afternoon in celebration o f the oc casion. The children enjoyed games and, tur<53 ^ bfi worth fte cost onl jf the were served refreshments o f ice cream . , . . . , , . . . . . . . . i homemaker has a real use fo r them, and cake from u table set in the yard. , .. . . . . . , , 3 ’’ Wives who are considering the pur- Muunture dogs attached to baskets o f . , „ . . , , . . ... .. . „ chase o f a mechanical refngertor will candies were piven as favors. • , . > _ . . get many helpful pointers from the Those present were Betty Wisecup,! , . . . ... .. m. I,• n . „ _r „ .. ,agricultural extension service bulletin Phyllis Frame, Ann Huffman, Beth v . « . .. n *'• . . .... ’ . “ Buy Your Automatic Refrigerator Turnbull, Conna Wiseman, Barbara ... n . „ „ . . , . . ’ “ with Dollars and Sense” which may be and•Ethabelle Taylor, Joan Hamman.> , - - .. . . . secured from county agricultural Charlotte Collins, Barbara Smith,1 Mildred Williamson, Sally Kay Cres-j / • V. ______ __ well, Linda Gordon, Jane Davis, Mary ; 1 . , . Grace Markle, Genevieve -Reed, Betty ■ Agricultural and home economics Townsley, Marilyn Stewart and Janet ball6t,ns 181hou,1fd bc inc,uded on ft!l «“ best sellers ’ lists, as 13,998,138 Gordon, o f Cedarville, and Neil Dune-1 vant, o f Xenia, copies were distributed in the United States by extension agents in 1938. hardly'possible. The Republicans are using the same rules on appointments that have been used for years and by the way, we notice the New Dealers down in Washington are demanding endorsement by county committees. “ What’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.” We have always ob served that Civil Service was most popular with the “ Ins” and unpopular with the “ Outs,” regardless o f ad ministrations. M f lU O 1 2 * C Curfittm --S U I M i M M » * . r i w fa» a n * f t f M r f l d A C J M i ftM W ftim kt M M * . A H lM t t Sutm A m u ! mm . I^VliiI Tabet. fWMKif- : TVmlng. tMtallafl Tele»W«M ~ , Snfer! W«fcMt m M m *. ' JPIGKERING ELECTRIC Cn itattor and Dealer Constables must conform with a new law if they make arrests for traf fic violations on . the highway. His automobile must have signs, designed by the state, painted on each side of the car and the back as well. Other wise he cannot make arrests on the highway. The law goes into effect Thursday. Officers in incorporated towns and cities must wear uniforms and use the insignia designed by mum ipalitiea. Township officers must wear forestry green uniforms with Sam Brown belts ,otherwise arrests cannot be made. The idea o f the law is to give motorists protection from the crooked constables that- set up speed traps, make unjust arrests on the plea o f speeding, parking, etc. Many Constables work With a erdoked justice o f peace lor lees alofie and the. motorist is helpless. Automobile clubs backed the passage o l the law as a protection* o f all motorists. . The Democratic organizations that want to upset the new Civil Service law received a heavy jolt Saturday when the American Federation of Labor in Ohio Went on record as ap proving the new law and stood pledg- The New Dealers down in Washing ton are doing nil they can1to keep Ohio from getting the $1,300,000 due the state for old age pensions since last October. Cong. Jenkins intro duced a bill to pay Ohio but New Deal ers want to hold money due pension era because- of something Democratic Governor Davey did. I f the state hat the money a few more pensioners could be added or a little bit added to those now on the list. If Ohio does not get the money it is the pen sioners that are out and the money was collected from Ohio taxpayers. Some day a Republican administration in Washington will pay what is due Ohio pensioners, “Vo -Ag” Student Given Award Harold Corry has been carrying out a dairy herd improvement program on his home farm. This is one phase o f his agriculture course. He tests and weighs the milk from the individuals in the herd periodically. He weighs the feed each cow consumes. These records are kept accurately and sum marized at the end o f the year. Harold and his father were given a pure bred male calf by. the Purity Dairy o f Springfield in recognition o f the highest quality milk which was re ceived at the Purity Dairy during the past month. Harold also has a dairy heifer pro ject, JOHN NELSON DIED IN SPRINGFIELD, THURSDAY John Nelson, 00, died last Thursday in a Springfield nursing home, after a brief illness. *Hc was born in Lan caster County, Pn.j and had been a resident o f Clark county for 70 years. Until about ten years ago Mr. Nelson operated a farm near Selma. He was a member o f the Selma Methodist Church, , , He is survived by three sons, Homer 70 Per Cent o f Lambs Graded Tops! Of'the Fat Lambs received at the Opening Lamb Sale Monday, July 31st seventy per cent graded tops! $ 5 . 0 0 P R E M I U M to the consignor of the most lambs at each Monday’s sale until further notice. THE SPRINGFIELD LIVE STOCK SALES COMPANY Sherman Ave. SPRINGFIELD, O. Phone 5942 —Your eyes are worth the price of all the glasses ever made and like as not you need but one pair. Why hesitate? Examining eyes and relieving eye trouble is not a side line with us, it is our Specialty, An appointment will assure you o f prompt attention. Dr. r . c. OptorAetric Eye Specialist Over Woolworth’s Xenia, Ohio ASK THE PAINTER* *«• WINfall yM MM HANHA’$ 4AUN SSAi thru e totfer fa*ftfoy •ad mart aeanamfcaf /ah. 1*0 'TH 2 t h e COOL SPOT F rt-Sak , Thrill Nit*s “MAISIE” Robari Y oun t Ann Eotham Starts Sundsy . FIVE DAVE JOHN GARFIELD And “Tha Four DauflKtarf”' STATE rAut- 3 Thura. .1 Wk. James, Cagney George Raft' Jane Bryan In “EACH: DAWN I DIE” v EXTRA! : Metro News Donald Duck Cartoon ' Aug. 6 * Sat. ,4 Day*.. Ann Sheridan Pat O ’Brien John Payne In “Indianapolis Speedway” .. Alto RKO Newt Short 8ubject FAIRBANKS Matter painter*tell you that qualiiy gim *al«faction. Quo!* ity paint contain* beauty, durability, wearability and coni* plete satisfaction, AH these you buy when you n l fofr-* V I A N N A ’ j GREEN SEAL FAINT CEDARVILLE FARM IMPLEMENT, INC, CWtarvU!#, Ohio F . L. NELSON, O. a OPTOMETRIST Jamoatotm, Ohio Etpednl Attention Given School-Age _ /ea t ( 8ub»cr&i To TM)s m UftAT.n
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