The Cedarville Herald, Volume 64, Numbers 27-52

AND PUBL Y J bW r t *A Hhm Tost o f e « , CWditfB#, 0$t£§, O tte iir 81,J J t f , S tow ed eifta* muttar, JNsly w T lM X •ir w trr « ^ i w r m ^ t A i 9 m s . c ^ m a m warn m ilk * Wlt% iwitsrtary oswwddtoar v w time with 100 per cost p w i t t itod i # 0 i tu to r e ^ e g m r toem i»«e« to w age* m much iui W l t M I M I it wteta* <r eoamm e w , «r ft dairyman, kaa mot hitd somethin? hf tmMt -fell' w r f ^ m » S w ■ the totoreets *g(faring with, low income at present to the «toiry itoranwr to Ohio as well as other states. New York fftmewi ire figWing fo r itigtotr prieas for milk, which must he ftoto^mtotor omw t of the Agriculture department price fixing breach. Many politicai tears have been shed to public by the New Deal to ftona&of the down trodden farmer, but the New Deal must also he guided by a retail price fixer to Washington, Bat the price o f milk is not the only complaint the dairy farmer has a right to have. He cannot sell his milk to Open market but must sell where he is told. He has nothing to do with the testing and grading, to plain simple language about all he has to do to provide the milk and take whatever check is handed him, Complaints in certain quartern about the. test- tog and grading o f milk gives rise to the general belief that there to “ something rotten in Denm ark.” Milk on one side of the street brings a certain test On the other side o f the street it is rated a few points higher, ■ . The dairy farmer has a perfect right to a higher price for his milk under a war time schedule o f profits for most every­ one else. It can plainly be shown that a farmer with ten cows cannot make as much net profit each week && the fellow that delivers the milk from house to house in the city and is handed a check based on union wages for four or five hours work. The average wage in most cities Is above ?30 a week for milk, driv­ ers, and the driver neither"owns the truck or the horse and- wagon, - ** • t - ' '„i r* . i Milk farmers should arise and exercise their rights and enjoy some o f the war-time profits that are being',handed in­ dustry and organized labor. Probably the New Deal might offer you “ parity” , whatever thatmeans. AAA DELIBERATELY BREAKS WHEAT MARKET Wheat growers in Ohio'as well as the nation have had a taste o f AAA management in deliberately, breaking the wheat market, thinking'that tins method Would hold back Wheat. Just the reverse has happened, even the speculator on the market daily"has unloaded his holdings thus addingtothe unsold actual wheat on the market. It is predicted the wheat market is now on.a down grade such as even the government cannot stop. " The first step in planned AAA management was ^hen the Communistic group behind the scene to the Agriculture head­ quarters in’ Washington ordered a 12 per, cent moisture base instead of the usttaf 14 per cent that has been standard for fifty years. This meant that all government wheat under the • loan plan had to go through the -drying-process which., took ' more time , nd helped clog the elevator capacity in the country as not all have dryers. It also meant an extra charge to farm­ ers getting a loan o f five cents a bushel or an increase from 17 cento a bushel to 22 cento a bushel for a loan, storage, etc. Another report to circulation that is said to, have helped break the wheat.price and send it down from 96 iast week to less than 88c this week was that the agriculture department has been doing a.back-door business to offering to sell govern­ ment wheat to millers at prices ,that have been fivfe cents a bushel below the .Chicago-1 price. Buyers hedge and bid lower with the'government forced to always sell on the low market, • much lower than the Chicago price. With such a situation there Was no support fo r a higher market. Estimates o f a greatly increased spring wheat harvest , over former years adds to the government planned control of wheat," At present it is said there is iess wKeatih the hands o f speculators and to mills f o r ,flour and feed than any July to more than fifty years. Few have any confidence to what is to happen to Washington. • 102nd ANNUAL GREENE 1941 Farmer* that hare been toying gov- aramant shelled corn have about •sough to one trial order if all the report* w* get are true. One Beaver- weak farmer who is feeding cattle states that to has had all of the mouldy com to wants and ■would not have had toe cattle go through what they have if it had been given him free. The corn is chaffy and to an­ other instance after the farmer tod it, in hi* grainery it heated. This meant that it hud to to taken out and spread on the tom floor. Several hog feeder* say the government corn toa turned hog* back where it has been fed. Old, musty corn o f poor quality the government has had to take oyer, is mixed with a fair per cent of good com and put on the market. Oh.iafeed­ ers have trouble-getting good corn of-the 1940 crop from,the government. Every effort i* totog made to force. owmtoyf Wto fuam»NK tow fftos- ttow f ^ | The C1 p huge Triton* had an in- teraettog artkla Bataurday relative to the actual value of old aluminum warn. Aeeordtog to an interview which covered the six Blinds smelting firms, little o f thi* aluminum, if any, will find its way into airptones. The technician* say it will to absolutely impossible to purify thi* scrap alural- num„to the standard set by the gov- ‘ ernment for airplane needs. Greene County Fair * Opens Tue»day UB0AL KOTlCai A representative of the American Smelting A Refining Co., Whiting, Ind, say* most o f these pot* and pans con­ tain iron, copper, lead, tto, solder, If the skillet is cast aluminum, a good part of this metal I* so impure with qther metals it will to impossible to- refine it. In many pot* and pans, only the outside surface is aluminum, other metal* being used as a base. Thus we begin to find out that the alumi- ■ num p*n used in the kitchen'is not as touch of the desired metai as the pur­ chaser thought. ' However this retail store,aluminum farmw to^purchwe the’^weriera w r l ? t a value according to'the experts. two or three year* old, that ha* mould In it. Indiana farmer* are now organizing the wheat counties in that state, the home1state of Sec. Wiekard, who dares stand in behalf of the Indiana farmers on the wheat quota‘and pen­ alty, Lamont O’Harra, Hew Castle, Pa., president, sent a telegram several days ago to Sec. Wiekard but. after a, week had hot received an answer, The following is part Of the telegram: “A®a producer of excess wheat who has no money with which to pay the fine levied on mm and as a producer o f hogs with nd feed and po money to toy it, I request that you instruct the Henry county AAA committee to permit me to feed wheat grown on my allotted acres to my starving hogs, Which have now had nothing to eat for three days on my own farm. Ow­ ing to lack of feed and money with which to toy it, I have been compelled to sell ail my hog* except those which are too small for market.” It can to mode into Duraluminum, which is made o f aluminum, mangan­ ese, copper, and magnesium. After all who then is to become the actual' owner pf the metal pets and pans the ladies think will go Into airplane parts but will to uSed for something else? Is it the cute means of bringing the ■war into the kitchen where enraged mothers hew worry about the twenty- one year old youths that are to he- come gun fodder in Roosevelt’s Euro-’ pean army? They are not being pall­ ed for one year ‘ service, Roosevelt says to is planning a ten year en­ gagement. Thus the twenty-one year old yodth may be thirty-one when h is mustered out. * - * A radio commentator some,evenings ago says England has a big supply, o f Scotch whisky on hand ready for ship­ ment to this country, but due to the War, cooperage is hard to get. It was less than a year ago that a cargo o f 350,000 cases o f bottled Scotch was sent to this country under convoy, the IT. 8. guarding the shipment at this end o f the line. Barrels and bottles are hard to get in the war zone and how special tanks o f metal are to to constructed to Ship tto British liquor which is also to to convoyed to the 0 . S. shores, Nb doubt this Is ft part -of the Roosevelt, Knox, Stinuwn plan for defense. Keeping tto nation drunk js about the only way Roosevelt can keep the-country under war fever heat. It will take more than liquor to keep tto one year draftees in the army.* Most of them have had enough lies forced on' them for one year. XENlAr OHIO Ju ly 19 , 30 , 31 , Aug. X Day and Night Racing Program MEMBERS IN CHARGE B .U Bell * R. K. Haines N. N. Huntey STARTER . Stephen G^Phillipa, Xenia, Ohio TUESDAY, JULY 29,1941 , Burse 2:26 Trot ..... ........................;.................. :.... ............. $300.00 Free For All Pace ............................ ...................... . 400.00 Cup Donated by Clark Hardware Co., Jamestown, O. 2:18 Pace (Stake) ................................. ................ 700.00 Cup Donated by Dakin Hotel, Xenia, Ohio WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1941 3-Year-Old Pace (S take)............... ......... 260(00 And Added Money Cup Donated by Xenia National Batik, Xenia,- Ohio 2-Year-Old Trot (Stake) *......................................... 250.00 And Added Money Cup Donated by The Greene County Lumber Co., Xenia, O. 2:14 Pace................ ...................................... ............ 300.00 THURSDAY, JULY 31,1941 j'3-Year-Old Trot (S take )................ ...................... . 250.00 And Added Money Cup Donated by The Carroll Binder Co., Xenia, O. 2-Year-Old Pace (S take)......................... ................ 250.00 . And Added Money. * Cup Donated by Ed McQuown, R. F. D. 3, Xenia, O. 2:14 T rot................. ,.................................................. 300,00 FRIDAY* AUGUST 1,1941 2 :20 Pace......................................................... J..... . 300.00 Handicap P a ce .......... .............. ................................ . 350.00 2:18 Trot (S take).................................. .................. 700.00 Cup Donated by Stiles Co., Inc., Xenia, Ohio Speed entries close July 26th at 11500 P. M. All other entries close Thursday, July 24th at 6:00 P, M, Baum** Circus and Rodeo HORSE SHOW— July 29, 30, 31, ai 7:30 P. M. 4-H CLUB STYLE SHOW—August 1, « t 7:30 P. M. lirostoolt ftew -4 1 «rM a Cattle, Swift*, Sheep, Poultry Madhtoary and Automobile Displays 4-H d u b AdiyttiM -^ttottgt Exhibits—Vocational Atr^Mrftur* Di*p!toy**~4)ottestki Arts—Flower Show — . Asdutu(egfcow— FtwttiM»VoietaMes—Grains—Merchant* M i l t s — BABY' BEEF SALE, FRIDAY MORNING. MIDWAY FOR FUN AND FROLIC General Admission 26 cents Grand Stand 25 cents N. N. Hunter, President B. U. Bell, Treasurer &. K, Haines, Vice President Mrs, J, Robert Bryson, Sec. Cong. Gehrmann, Ind., R., Wiscon- j sin, charged Saturday that the Agrf- culture Department has been used and is to to an open exponent of this coun­ try entering -actively into the Euro­ pean war. He says the AAA and con­ servation outfits are to be manned to go before the farmers to urge farmers to sign ft pledge of loyalty to the U. S. and to produce only what the govern' ment orders and accept the govern' ment-offered price, These two agencies are to to paid $5 a day per man for this service according to the Wiscbn- sin statesman fo r hooking the farm- Wisconsin is.to bfe'thc first state Cong, John M* Vhreys, Columbus, Republican, opposes the keeping of, draftees beyohd thc one year promised by the government at the time they .were drafted. The Roosevelt war mon­ gers want a shooting war and are ready to break faith not only with the draftees' bat the public and have dug up the “if” story on the ground that an emergency exists. He says he will not vote for ai»y bill to keep the joys in service longer than a year until Congress is convinced “such an em­ ergency exists.” “ If the moral of the army is as high as the generals say it is, a sufficient auditor of the present draftees will volunteer for -longer service.” Cong. Voreys fchohld have gone-further and stated tto real em­ ergency is the anger that exists in every army camp against RooseVelt and the Hear Deal, rise real purpose is to get these bays out Of tto country where they wilt to unable to com­ municate with tomb folks readily and where they wilt have trouble casting an “absent voter’s ballot.” * • The 102ad annual Green* .County Fair open* Tuesday, July 29 and con­ tinue* four day* and night*. All re­ ports indicate live *tock exhibit* kb , well a* other classes will to filled. The feature of former fair* ha* been tto 4-H fat calf ahow and there will be just a* much interest this year it not! more, according to predictions. The* 4-II livestock exhibit not only grow* year by year but is improved each year. The .Tuesday races open with a 2:20 trot and 1300 purse with a Free for All Pace and $400 purse with a cup donated by Clark Hardware Co., o f Jamestown. The 2:18 pace with $700 purse and Dakin .Hotel Cup is the third event. Wednesday the 3-Year-Old Pace (Stake) and $250 purse with Xeqia National Bank cup is tto first number. Next the 2-year old trot, purse $350 ree and G ne County Lumber Co, cup with the 2:14 pace and $300 purse, Thursday is the 3-Year Old Trot $260 purse and Carroll Binder Co/cup, 2-year old pace (Stake) and Ed Me- Quown, clip,with $00 purse. The last event wifi be the 2:14 trot for $300 purse,.:.;.'4' . . Friday is the $300 purse for 2:10 pace; $350 handicap pace; and 2:18 $take trot with a $700 purse and the Stiles Co., Inc,, cup. LOCAL DELEGATION HEADED FOB CANADA FISHING TRIP er*. solicited. The government position in this move is that American farmers are not loyal on the war issue and all farmers having loans on wheat and Corn are to to threatened that their loans will to called if they do not sign the pledge when the AAA or conserva­ tion agents call at their homes. Hitler says, sign or else—Roosevelt says sign or to branded disloyal. What will Greene county farmers say to the New Deal “Charley McCarthy’s” when they knock at the farm door hearing the Roosevelt threat? lhe administration does not need to expand for the AAA all over the country has Men preach­ ing ,the New Deal doctrine in the name of defense. All this propaganda is cooked up in Washington, relayed to state headquarters and there orders go out to the county organizations to “carry the^mail.” Chairman Mason in this county has been ;doing \his tost to sell the war in the name of de­ fense but he has had few buyers, The question that is causing much! comment in Washington % not the draftees, the wheat or corn issue, the Importation o f Scotch- liquor, but “What did Mrs, Wheeler say to Roose­ velt in a heated discussion about'the- attitude of her husband, Senator Wheeler, who Is opposing sending our boys out of the country?” The Wheel­ ers and Roosevelts once were the very closest of friends but they are no longer on speaking terms and the White House is doing ambush shoot­ ing’ at the Senator, I f current com­ ment around tto cftpitol is correct no one says Sen. Wheeler ever received a cent o f English money to promote the campaign to get this nation in the European war. Such reports’have been in circulation with-several radio com­ mentators, the Sunday night “peep­ hole” New Yorker, some three or four columnists including a feminine so­ cialist writer, Orte hardly knows what to believe about this government aluminum drive for old pots, skillets and pans. How much aluminum is in an ordinary pan? Is the metal drive actually needed for this metal? Is it only a means of Working up war' sentiment in this There is an oil shortage not in Ohio, central states nor from the Mississippi river to California, The actual short­ age Is along the East coast. But there is not an actual shortage of gasoline as “Ants in his Pants Ickes” wOuld have you believe. The shortage is on water transportation, You cannot ship gasoline in stock Cars or carton taxes. The East has always received most of its gasoline in tanker ships. Now there are not sufficient ships to meet the consumer demand on the At­ lantic. What became of the tankers ? Ickes purchased or commandeered them “in the emergency” , fifty at one time, ‘and ordered them turned over to England. There’s your answer as to the “gasoline shortage.” There is no shortage of “gas” (hot air) from the Department of Commerce, where the once Chicago.real estate dealer cools his brow in an air conditioned room. Bay a home and apply your rent on the payment. Bee us for plans, Ce- darville Federal Savings A Loan Assn. B ubsckibe T o T he H erald i 10 Allen Bldg. Xenia, O, 1 am noWdevoting all my time to tay Xenia office, DR. IRVIN S. HYMAN C h i r o p o d i s t * * . F o o t S p e c i a l i s t TREATING ALL AILMENTS OP THE FEET, ? Open daily— 0 A. M. to 5:30 P, M. . Evening Hours, Tues., Thurs,, Sat, » m ^ Photos: NewLowFee* »w, House—Main410-R Anotherlocal delegation has gone to Canada on a fishing trip. Leaving this morning were J. F. Hilt, Ag. in­ structor in the local schools, Theodore Marshall and WilliamFisher, Male Help _Wanted—I have some pleasant easy work for a man in Ce- darville. Can easily make $40.00 or more a week, Nothing to sell. Age nb objection. Goodman Construction Co„ 728 E< Cecil St., Springfield, Ohio. m X K 7 E M U S T a l l B ang to g e th e r , e lse w e sh a ll hang separately . Benjamin Franklin Mfoam P. Null, residing at Cempaay “L” 147th Div., 8Tth Infantry; Camp gfcslby, Hattiesburg, HbsiipdppJ, is hereby notified that Patricia Null has filed her petition agsinst him far di­ vorce in Case No. 22584, tofor* the Common,Pleas Court, Green* County, Ohm, and that said cause wifi to for hearing on or after August 28,1841. (7-U-fit-8-15) MARCUS SHOHP, Attorney for Plaintiff LEGAL NOTICE Edward Bauer, whosa place o f real dence i* unknown,wifi take notice that on Tuesday, June 17, 1841, Katherine Bauer filed her petition against him for divorce on the grounds of gross neglect of duty, before tto Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, In Case No. 22567, and that said causa will come on for hearing on or after August 2, 1941,’ at which tiipe judg­ ment may to rendered against him, (650,6t.7.25) Marcus Shoup, * ; Attorney for Plaintiff NOTICE Winifred May Marr, of Osborn, Greene County, Qhlb, hereby gives nor tice that she' will file her petition in the'Probata Court of Greene County, Ohio, paying for an order of ,aald Court, authorizing.the change o f her name from Williford May Marr, to Winifred Mae Ball; that said, petition will be for hearing before paid Court tin the 25th day of August, 1941, at 0:00 o’clock A, M,, or as soon there­ after as sftid Court may hear it. Hat­ ed July 21, ,1941. SS-l WINIFRED MAY MARR, By Morris D. Rice, as her attorney. nhmmw W wh - FOR GOOD FURNITURE BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE * t ■■ at In riplf 10 a ttmtttk 0t /«ft ViKKi wUt 0 tt 0 D*tUr»ti»» *i i*i*p*piHH 0 wm hl*t *lf*4 Julp4, ITJft "Tktt ti*r mutt »U tmr t 0 gttk»r." J . P. BOCKLETT SUPPLY CO. XENIA, OHIO r m jnNImiVpPU p PKflPPI#f'TNPI|#ftfBRRITIf Daaatoy, 4fl Hast JNaad M tm t, Cfhumkmt dhjhtb * • t We pay tor HORSES |400 mm ' ef ato* amd oendiricn ' TTa**M •Mdfplv %fmrraiSf fv8« Rumovofl • tmW XENIA P E R f|*H I J5%KR PHONE MA. 464 Baaarse Chang** E. G. Btohsieb, Xenia, Ohio ftargato Hew 1«« TNXtM Twin Thrill B »y»! — SCREEN— : # “BLONDIE * — IN — SOCIETY" SUN, — MON. — TUES. mHWINMWIlHWW»l-. I FARM 4% LOANS |No application fee. No appraisal i i fee. Refinance your loans at tto j f lowest interest rates ever offered, i |McSavaney & Co, London, O. j J Call or Write ‘ s LEON H. KLING Odarville, O. § | Phone: 6-1901 » , a n a m e t h a t S t a n d s 1 i U fcpr i n t o 5 P R I D 6 H I L D Adair’s *t. Detroit « . ' ‘ . Xenia, fM eznei E n jo y a GOOD SHOW Pipe, Valves and Fittings for j Water, gas and steam, Hand and j Electric Pumps for all purposes, ] Bolts. Pulleys, V Belts, Plumbing j and Heating Supplies. IREG£( 1 T a STA 1 • F i m oNBou Thur*. July 24 Ginger Rogers In - t “ T o r n , D ic k , And Harry” W ith Georg* Murphy FrL July 2S Ma Lupino M b Garfield I* “Out O f The “ Time Out For Rhythm” B ody Valla* A n * M illar i— phw —* “Naval Academy’ 7 Fraddla Bartholonsa'W to t July *• Kf . i«m, (July 27 6G601M Brown *WtDB OPtH TOWN** William le y i plus .M U tm vm AB0Tie„ ftlehard AriW OPEHA7BS 3-WAV'S...from telf-rortfomed bafiery or 110. volt AC Or DC . .The buiHJti movable Wavemagnetotturet performance under difficult conditions. 7 Hit powerful su­ perheterodyne hat 6 tubas, including heater cathode rec­ tifier tune. n i i iD VW* Mil t*6l« if72......... <#*IIH*tl*N» IN tMt NIWttT ♦MOWN ^ •KUIN.OftAY *MmtN^AtIJOATOtt *MOW N m d IVOflY ^OVlOgAgyw •WW « S & ftAMCh McCallister RadioService Cadanrilla, O hio ENJOY. YOUR FAVORITE PROGRAM ,VriY/.. >h .7 ilaWe Oatfs *atw * P. M. r f t ,iiiiii»iwiiiHiHiniiHHniMw,iiitiwwHi»wHiiiiiMimmiiiimiitiiiiiimisiiiiiiiiiniwtrtMni»iiHiiMn>iii«wimi<iiiii^ii(iiM» O ' " / ' T H 2 ! im Eight A along tto beat Publicity Bum taario. Locale. Bay, the beam - y> Front rc Ithaca, Mich.; ' N, J.- Charles L. Waterfield,, Second ville/Ky,; phai N- 3.; Granvjli Jack Connell, ’ . Third r< onto, Ont.; W. , Geprge Lake, ' Walton, N. Y,; driver. - x i N , With the trij . fishers' party Ytaria, hearing l Toronto,, one o. ' .cities we.have ■ of size, we had thb Ontario met Before going into ; ■must give you reception we h: McLaughlin, pre-in.' tors o f Canada i" <> - nificent home, i well-kept^ lawr- “flowers and I unph - altaund was t1 heads of the coi party. In our last le. . charming yeiiti; rangemeht that. had seen off the ’ poo) have bund: < fight* that add at night»,JPXs garden was the cussing tto laj We found there off to tto-side Company dfficii escorted to the found roses by bloom as well flowers for hoi was a Complete < larger thah the here it was we flowers growing cent years gar: roses grow bloom is more ■ vegetables are the rase plants, i garden-plant in The lettuce kee ing the soil anr roots, o f the rt foliage reflects thereby .permit open without b excessive sun r Garden” we foi for quail, pheas Tha “Kitchen Gi new to many o) Now that we and this time ( Edward Hotel, < ate hotels ownet kan party was extra hours on and yet. see To shopping distrl Ware few place publishers could can dollars as Mirny wanted tc trophies of vai tors of the fam has two immen Eaton’s and Sir cover a large c informed that • large store in t > As for shops ol that jewelry at stop*, toemed tto numerous t that can to foi noticed several tto same name: oounfry and an • One o f oar gt® in masiy Canad iHfomedftCan- halk o f tto cha tto Demtaion. them hi every T to smallest htitncfc of a ban- huger ritkts, Xotolfing in < town sad Toto Itwls than wc 1 Watodtosdtho astofWwmAtp o avsey topartme) . dNr****t limn >■ Iwfert toe to ipino field TTtt t i » m FT TOWN1 » toyd a* ARCTIt trten

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