The Cedarville Herald, Volume 64, Numbers 27-52
1 cpm jw em i nxatALD, pjeepav , oorosmt 2 4 , m t T H E C E P A R V I U E H E R A L D KARLH BULL — .,-------— EDITOR AN© PUBLISHER JUHUrtU Atwm.f Okie N#w*p*p#f iUuxi.; Iliu tl y*Bey Pr«s A moc . ......... ■".... Entered At the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October SI, 1887, as second class matter. D. A . R. GUEST DAY; MRS. J. B. PATTON SPEAKER Suggestions on the part the D. A. R. can play in the .national defense program were offered by Mrs. James B. Patton, Columims, vice regent of the Ohio Society, Daughters <tf the American Revolution, in an address at the “ guest day” meeting o f Cedar Cliff Chapter at the home o f the re gent, Mrs. Fred Dobbins, near Ce darville, Saturday afternoon. Mrs: Patton, who warned o f im pending dangers to this nation, sug? gested that D. A. R. members send literature, magazines and papers to soldiers in camps and greeting cards to those who. might not get cards from home.' Gretings were extended- by Mrs. William Brown, regent o f George Slagle Chapter, Jamestown, and Mrs. George Eckerle, regent o f Catherine GreeneChapter, Xenia. The meeting was in observance o f the seventeenth anniversary o f the Cedarville chapter. Refreshments were,"served in the dining room where Mrs. Roger Hen derson and Mrs. I. C. Davis presided at the tea table. Assistant hostesses were the following members o f the executive board: Mrs. David McElroy, Mrs. Raymond. Williamson, Mrs. W. A. Turnbull, .Mrs. M. J. Bahin, Mrs. Houston Cherry, Mrs. Hairy" Rife and Mrs. Ervin Kyle, . YOUNG PEOPLE'S HALLOWE’EN PARTY If you'happen to-see witches, black cats, owls,- 'bats, and .ghosts flitting about the gym on next 'Wednesday evening (beginning at about thirteen minutes to eight)* get a good grip on yourself and just remember that it is the hour for a masquerade social planned.b$ the young.people o f the Methodist, Presbyterian, and United Presbyterian Churches. The students and faculty o f Cedarville College are to be guests o f the young people. HOME CULTURE CLUB HEARS SOUTH AMERICAN TUESDAY Miss Marian Tyson, Antioch College junior and a South American refugee, was gueBt speaker at the annual “ Guest Day” meeting o f the Home Culture Club in the Masonic Hall on Tuesday afternoon. . Miss Tyson described her experi ences ab a secretary in a mining dis trict in South .America for two years, after arriving there from Germany, and then told o f coming from South America to the United States. Mrs. Homer Reiter played a group o f harp solos, and Miss Glenna Basore of the Cedarville .College faculty, en tertained the guests with a group of readings. Twenty members and twenty-eight guests were served a salad course by a committee composed o f Mrs, F. M. To Prevent Fuel Waste Adjust Oil Burner Now Owners of household oil burn ers can avoid unnecessary- ex pense and conserve fuel this win ter by having burner flames prop-, erly adjusted with a flue gas analyzer. With his flue gas analyzer, a service man can adjust a flame for the most efficient use of fuel. H om e ow n e r s , h ow e v e r , a re warned against trying to adjust the flames of their oil burners themselves. Oil companies and furnace representatives can sup ply trained men for the job. The Majority -of the country’s 2,000,000 house-heating oil burn ers are east of the Alleghenies, according to the U. S. department of agriculture, Use of a flue gas analyzer can help materially in conserving oil, which is particu larly important in the region faced with a shortage. Experiment in Use O f Dried Vegetables BERKELEY. — Dried vegetables will soon be a part of every army cook’s larder, if experiments carried out by the fruit products division of the University o f California ‘College of agriculture are any indication. The division began investigating methods of dehydrating vegetables for army use more than a year ago at the suggestion of the .quartermas ter corps. D r .W . V. Cruess, head of the division, reported today that the methods developed have been very successful in drying the vegeta bles and still retaining their color, flavor, and qooking quality. The secret o f success, ‘ said Dr. Cruess, .was found to lie in thorough ly scalding the raw vegetables in steam to precook them and destroy enzymes responsible for undesirable __ a Friday, October 24, 1941 BETTER B&BUYING DEFENSE BONDS—OR ELSE Two weokfiA&o in Springfield Governor Bricker challenged the New Dealers to grab the Workmen's Unemployment Com pensation fund as had been threatened by Roosevelt ap pointees, More than two hundred million dollars in the fund belongs to Ohio manufacturers, retailers, as well aB all labor interested in that fund. * Paul McNutt, a New Dealer, head of a New Deal social security set-up in Washington was interviewed in Cincinnati, Monday, by a reporter and he stated thrit a special law is being drawn up to take all this money away from Ohio as well as Texas and a few other states that oppose squandering it in New Deal projects. What the Roosevelt Communists want is to get that money converted into defense bonds. It was admitted that all but about seven million of a billion paid direct tq the government had been traded for bonds and the money spent to aid Russia in her fight with Hitler. * The New'Deal fund snatchers have proposed to take away the funds for all firemen and policemen used for pensions as Well as several millions’ paid by school teachers into-the teach er's retirement pension fund. It is a raid planned purposely to get control of all the money to unload government bonds that in a year or so will be as plentiful, and as -cheap as they were in Frnace following the World War/ .where a basket full . could be purchased for a dollar, French bonds are-still unpaid. Democrats and New Dealer should be buying more de fense bonds. AAA committees who are living off the taxpay ers evidently are not doing their part. It is costing Uncle Sam a good many million dollars each year, to pay the 98,^00 AAA committeemen on the pay roll in the nation. The average citizen is going to be forced to pay out his earnings in income taxes. The job holders should be forced to buy the defense bonds along with corporations that are financing the war mongers in the nation to build up a background to continue the war. The New Deal recent trade treaty, better known as the Roosevelt Free Trade agreement, wherein the tariff on Argentine beef has been dropped to 8 cents'a .pound,, has brought out much critical comment among cattle feeders, especially those who have paid a good pound price fo r feeding stock. This coupled with the fact the government is supporting hog prices ay British purchases o f lard and ba con brings out also that beef cattle feeders have been left out in the frigid weather. At present the ton- age of Argentine beef into the U. S. is the greatest in more than 20 years. Cattle feeders "have appealed to the agricuture department In Washington but each time have been virtually ig nored. The cut in tariff rites opens the nation's markets to greater ship ments o f dressed beef from Argen tina. - Reynolds, Mrs. V, C. Bumgarner, 1changes, in flavor, color, odor and Mrs. J. C, ToWrisley, Mrs. fi. R. Gib son, Mrs, C, E. Masters, Mrs, Walter Cummings and Mrs. Paul Orr, A profusion o f fall flowers decorat ed the ball for the party. r e d cross s e w in g texture. Very thorough drying was found to be essential to- preparing vegetables that will keep well. The Red Cross sewiqg group will .meet in the Home Economics room in the basement o f the High School on Wednesday, October 29, at 1:30 P. NT. Any women in Cedarville and com mnnity who wish to work through the Red Cross are invited to be present. Material on hand for this meeting Is part-woolen cloth to be used fo r women's skirts.- There will also be yarn fo r anyone who wishes to knit. Please bring your own needles and thimbles or knitting needles, as the local group does not furnish these items. * ELECTION NIGHT SUPPER ’ Don’t forget the annual election night supper (chicken and all the flx- jrt's) at the Presbyterian Church on November 4. Picked Pears for sale, Murray Mar shall, Cedarville, f o r Sale- Duroc boars ready for service, A desirable type for market feeding. Call Denver Wolfe, Cedar- villa, 6-2784. Fanii Hill Land One of the big advantages of form ing hill land on the -contour is the amount of water that is saved for soaking into the ground. During an eight-year period at a government soil erosion station in southwestern Iowa, an area listed on the contour lost only 2.7 Inches of water a year, While a similar slope area farmed up and down hill lost 19 inches of rainfall. In a drouth year, especial ly, such differences are very signifi cant, Not only will cattle feeders fe<51 the price pressure on beef but the wool growers must compete with Argen tine wool that is to come in’ now under che free trade agreement.*1Northern .tates where flax is a major crop must compete with flax from. South Ameri ca. William .Jennings'Bryan and his free trade platform never had warm e r support Chan Roosevelt, and Hull nave shown in granting Argentina all she. asks .under what is known as. the •‘Good Will Policy" at the expense of the American farmer. The plan is to glut the market to force down the price of foods. Last week representatives of _37 states gathered in Washington to campaign for uncontrolled prices on all farm products..,Strange as it may •seem, the president o f the American farm Bureau* Federation,. Edward J ’Neil, Alabama free trade Democrat, .vanted control of farm crop prices to ward off “ inflation". O’Neal has sold the bureau down the river when ever necessary to promote the New Deal. The Bureau is and has been nothing more than a cog in the poli tical wheel, several hundred members ocing igiven government jobs at fat salaries, in return for support-in na tional elections. The Washington con ference was- anything than a ‘‘bed ol '.oscs.” O’Neal, W. R; Ogg, bureau lobbyist and W. •R. Randolph, Ala bama bureau president left the meet ing in a huff amid jeers and hisses After they departed the group passed* resolutions urging “ higher parity’ levels for all farm products and .dp- ‘manded that the government freeze its loan stocks o f farm commodities. There was open opposition as to ceiling on farm prices. It was urged that other times than 1909-14'be used as a basis for “ parity,” this being a depression period, ' In conversation a few days ago with W. S. Hopping we are informed that the highest price he received for hogs during the last World War period was $23 a hundred. At that time all prices were high but the farmer was on par with industry. No such a thing ns “ parity” *was known. Neither was there a paid AAA to sit back and tickle farmers under the chin to make them believe they are really enjoying prosperity by being handed a govern? ment- check for twenty-five or fifty dollars. For Sale-—Two radiant beating stoves in good Phone 64181, Cedarville, gas open condition. F. L. NELSON, O. D. OPTOMETRIST ' - * ( Jamestown, Ohio Especial Attention Given. SCHOOL-AGE EYES We mentioned the waj/pricc o f hogs to one of our younger farmers, Ho ward Arthur, a recognized -feeder and beeder of Berkshircs. He tells us his experience as a farm ' boy in World War days feeding eight from a litter, as his first investment. The eight averaged 226 pounds and 'brought $23.25 a hundred, or an average of $52.54 each. Last Saturday under gov ernment pressure hogs did not bring oven $10 a hundred, Yet the AAA as the mouth-piece o f ‘the New Deal free traders tells you about farm pros perity. llie prosperity is in the salary checks received by members o f the county AAA comittce in addi tion to various commissions on wheat loans, crop insurance, etc. Older farm ers who enjoyed the World War prof its can attest to what both Messrs. Hopping and Arthur have stated. Wheat and corn in those days were more than twice present government controlled prices. orders. If tMi l* not inflation, what is itt . 4 j Just how to get mere pork in the “defense food campaign” has the farmers guessing with corn and wheat acreage reduced and feeders not per mitted to feed wheat without going to prison. Moreover it takes a year to grow crops and six months to feed out a hog for market. You can talk about beans, tomatoes, cabbage and garden truck until the farmer is ; black in the face but he is not told ; how-to fatten a hog without more corn or other equal feeds. A colored gent may be in the wood pile. Farm ers to be forced, to purchase govern ment owned wheat and Corn at high er prices to produce the additional food necessary. AAA leaders should start the ball rolling .by announcing how many war bonds' have been pur chased to help out the Russian Com munists, . ■ - Small business men and manufac turers sang their troubles b e f o r e . congressional committee in Columbus Tuesday which is hearing complaints as to the operation o f the war iri- lustries priority on certain materials needed for everyday commodities, Some 300 manufacturers and dealers were present, Ross Weygandt of Wooster ^aluminum manufacturer ask ed; “What will it -profit the Whole world to destroy our own commercial, life here at, home?’-’ Clarence Karst, Cincinnati manufacturer who has not been able to get steel sent an order to England for five car loads. He did this on the announcement that Eng land was .advertising in Brazil that immediate shipments, o f steel could be made. .He urged other manufacturers to ‘ send their orders to English firms and see if they, could get orders filled. Karst urged the congressional com- nittee to make an investigation as to where all our steel Is going. The steel mills are manufacturing nine times more steel daily than can be used by Jefense industries, according to Karst. . The scare of high farm prices caus ing inflation only comes from the paid' ugents o f the New Deal agricultural department and the AAA, Every AAA county committee is forced to preach this doctrine or get off the pay roll. The greatest violator o f alt economic laws is the government itself in pres ent day purchases not only o f war supplies but everything else because some New Dealer is drawing down a commission of 15 per cent. The press Tuesday carried a story the govern ment hqd purchased 300,000 miles of telephone wire, We arc told the gov ernment has more than 5,000 tons of galvanized roofing stored in one building In Dayton. Not so long ago the government gave a Miami Valley paper concern an order for 1,000,000 {beets o f bond paper for a munition factory operated under-government control. This was equal to 4,000,000 standard sized letter heads, which caused the company to hold up other Erecting a new home is going to be a problem under New Deal orders where one industry has priority over another for diffeurfit materials, es pecially metals cyf all kinds. Dictator rules are nowJnr force. Houses in de fense areas can get material. If you want to erect a grocery building in the same district you have preference over the farmer who wants a new home, The Rooseveltian idea o f pleasure resorts also exceed home re - quiremehts. If you want to erect a building in a defense area to open a saloon, you have the best of the farm er. Some enterprising speculator has a- plan to build some 400 houses near ^airfield to cate for government em ployees engaged in war industry. The village could not provide streets, water, sewerage, street lighting, more school room. Along Conies Santa Glaus from Washington and says go ahead wc will give you all these things and even paVcd streets—-free—at no cost to anyone. This is not inflation—only high farm prices will guarantee in flation, ^tenths ago Roosevelt boast ed about “ controlled inflation” being one of the things necessary for pros perity. Does anyone know when he. is right or wrong on this thing called, inflation? He has been both fo r and- against it within the past eighteen months. .. ■ 1 . Tyrone Power as a reckless American f ly e r , . . curvaceous Betty Grable . . . in songs, dances and,romances In “ A Yank in the RA.F.” l ^Starts at the Xenia Theater for a five day engagement*1 .Sunday, October. 26. the answer to protests by the Ag. department in Washington. The Guide recently carried a fine story on Henry Marshall Lafayette, Ind., newspaper publisher, land owner and one o f the largest cattle feeders in that state. He has never accepted a government check and opposes the AAA. Wallace is a nephew o f the late Daniel Mar shall o f this place noted auctioneer in his day, „ SMALL FIRE MONDAY A fire alarm early Monday morn ing called the fire department to!-the Bird Building where trash, in a metal barrel in the room used by the Naz- arene Church, There .was no damage other than from smoke and no water used. • ERVIN PROPERTY SOLD PUBLIC BALE Dan O’Connell having sold hlrfarra will quit fam in g and sell dairy cows, sheep and farm Implements a t public sale on the' Patterson Mill road, 1 mile soiith o f Spring Valley and Painters- villa road. Some household articles wiil alsp be offered. Cart Sprackleft Is the. auctioneer and ft. H. Spraeklen, Clerk. Lunch will he served on the grounds op day o f aple, Saturday, Oc tober 25th at Noon. We ply for . HORSES $4.004 COWS $2.00 * o f size and condition Hogs, Sheep, Calves, etc. Removed promptly call XENIA FERTILIZER R h o n e MA / 454 Reverse Charges E. G. Buchsieb, Xenia, Ohio For Shle—Good cpal heating stove pt reasonable price. It has new parts and is in first class condition, Can be seen at Sterrett resident, Xenia ave., west,side.- Price $10. Call at-this office for information. . For Sale—Firewood, Phone 6-1795. The strikers at the Maxwell Paper Co., Franklin, voted to return to work at once following a six .week's vaca tion. The union gave up demand for a closed shop and only production workers get increased pay, five cents an hour, just what the company offer ed before the walkout. Many families were destitute, and employees out on strike could not get public relief in Warren county. Merchants refused to give employees credit. It will take -ighteen .months labor on the increase of 5c an hour to make up what was lost in pay during the. strike covering six weeks. At first pickets attempted to destroy property but a court ii junction and deputy sheriffs-stopped this, - . . MUmmMUIIIIIMMMM j FARM 4% LOANS j | No application fee. No appraisal ! ! fed. Refinance your loans at the § I lowest interest rates ever offered. ! I McSavaney & Co. London, O. | | Call or Write '■/■.. f { LEON H. KL1NG Cedarville. 0 . 1 Phone: 6-1901 I HMitnoiMMmmmtmi The 68th annual state convention o f the Ohio W. C. T. U. has been in ses sion in Columbus and a former Ce- 'dbrvillc lady, Miss Mary B, Ervin, is president. One o f her recommenda tions is that protests be sent to maga zines encouraging feminine- and youthful drinking as well as banning liquor at or near army training camps, As important as the recommendations are, why should not the White House beer parties draw some attention, overlooking the Bkinless hot-dog menu. Not so long ago when the Eng lish royalty, Duke o f Kent, was a guest, everything from wine to gin and imported Scotch marked the Roosevelt household hospitality. It would be unusual but the W. C. T. U. might at some future meeting invite Mrs. Roosevelt to speak on the prog ress she is making in instructing young girls to drink their cocktails with “ dignity and grace.” — FOR SALE— The best Ohio Coal No. .6, $6.00 per ton. Stoker .oil treated coal, $5.50 per ' ■ ' . .- *. ■' ton ' ■ ’ ' EMMETT EVILSIZOR West Xenia Ave. Cedarville, Ohio iiiM iiitiin M im im u M iiiiiiiO tm o itu M im iiiitm M iiiiM iiH im M The Schmidt Realty Co„ Xenia, an nounces the sale o f what was once' the D. S, Ervin property, later own ed by E. A'. Allen and the HOLC, to' Elmer Saft, Dayton. The' building will be converted into a modern duplex. ' IT’S SHOWTIME Relax And See A Good Movie Today o r i v e I n t o JWtlMHELP G O O D f M O W ! RE6EHI LEGAL NOTICE James J. McCabe whose address is Battery “ C” 18th Coast Artillery, Ft. Stevens, Oregon, is hereby notified that Evelyn McCabe has filed her peti tion against him for divorce in Case Nq. 22682 before the Common Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, and that said cause will be for hearing on‘ or after November 22,1941. (i0-10-6t-U-14) MARCUS SHOUP 1 Attorney fo r Plaintiff I A NAME THAT STANDS ! FOR GOOD FURNITURE BUDGET PLAN ' AVAILABLE Adair’s N. Detroit St. Xenia, O. Friday arid Saturday TWIN THRILL DAYS! SCREEN LAUREL AND HARDY IN “GREAT GUNS” 5 DAYS COMING SUNDAY TYRONE B A U I E B H f COMEDY! r U W t K . DRAMA!SONCKI Alice Thure. £ Oct 23 FrU Oct. 24 \ tit CbarJe* Boyer ‘B °W Back ■**e Dawn” With ° UW* 2 B * t H »ti “Parachute Battaliou” With R°b*rt Nancy Iv®” ®” __Plu»—- «H e » r y F o r P re sid en t Sun, ii v .Oct. 24 H’ Gone Autry “DOWN. MEX ICO WAY” Plus “BLONDE FROM SINGAPORE” 8un. Mon T ubs 8onJa HenJ# “SUN VALLEY * SERENADE” Plus “‘The DOUBLECROSS” Always a* Battar 8how In Spring, field We read the Indiana Farmers Guide with considerable interest in as much an the oldest farm paper in that state has been outspoken against the wheat penalty of 4De -a bushel forced on farmers after they voted on the quota with a 15c penalty* It dcvelopes.now that the Farm Bureaus, County Agertts and AAA Committees all knew before the election the secret change in penalty, but did not so in form the farmery. A t leeast this is WE PAY CASH FOR THE FOLLOWING Fence Wi r e . . $ 9 .00 per net ton (2000 lbs.) Old Black Sheet Iron . . $10.00 per net ton (2000 lbs.) Galvanized Iron $ 7.00 per net ton (2000 lbs.) Delhiered Our Yard, South Burnett Road . and Big 4 Railroad Kasle Steel Compressing Co. Phoe .1740 Springfield, Ohio Glum Mrs. Edwin Wed n«ti speht the aunt, Mrs. Cora Trl Mr, Edward Baati school is to he. g j £5*nday at the local) during the Worshij Members o f the were entertained bj in Masonic Hall, Mids Edna Siefd visited hose SundaJ Mrs. H. T. Thomas , V. Wright. Mr. John McMillJ a patient in the Dayton, for several^ week-end -with his Mrs. J. M, McMillnr Mr. Fred MeMilll Pa., was a guest of Clayton McMillan ai] week-end.' Miss Julia McCalll in Clark county ach| at the home o f her j Mrs. Clyde McCalliJ Mrs. George Rams Verna, t)f Santa As several days, last wi mer’s brothor-in-lawl sey. ' . Mr. and Mrs. Hervq the weekend in Newl where they attended| niversary of the fd at Winchester Collej Wanted to Buy- cars, iron, rags and Evilsizor. West Xenil i Fri. and Sat., 1 Lew Ayres—Lio | DR. KILDARE’S | News—IPassi S' ‘ f Sun. and Mon ■S ■ I Greer Garson — | .-“ BLOSSOMS.;I B Also Late Ni 5 ' 5 1 11■ . I Wed. and Thu: I Kay f “TILLIE TH | Comedy and -Sc .MIIIIHIMIHMIlllUlllllllllltMIIII 1 imiiiiiiiimtmmiftmtfmmi 1
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