The Cedarville Herald, Volume 64, Numbers 27-52
e ijw a tm y* V r iiuy , HaymiBiat i t m i ww <mm m*m T H I C E D A R V I L L E H E R A % D KAJCUI BU^L — — — — EDITOR AND PUBLMHBJt XmutKX—N»tJ«u4 MttariM -M mw . j OM* Wmp***e Auee.j IU mh I Y|OI*y F «* AaaM. Batered lit the Poat Office, CedarvilleV Ohio, ~ October St, 1887, m second class matter. Friday, November 7,1941 GOVERNOR, GREENE COUNTY WILL BACK YOU The controversy over the control of the Workmen's share in the Bureau of Compensation fund nnddr Social Security be tween Governor John, wv Bricker arid the New Deal in Wash ington and the spirit in which Gov. Bricker is fighting to pro tect the fund, is proof that even.the power in the capitol will - avail little if public sentiment is considered. However, it must be kept ’in mind that the New Deal does not recognize even its own recently- passed laws .if they do not suit the whims of the ’‘Fifth Avenue Playboy-” in the White House. A score of orders’ from the New Deal, dictator could be named that were in defiance o f any law, The New Deal is hutigry.for more war funds to help Joe Stalin. Tq permit the fund to get in the hands of the New Deal crowd would be like a gallon of Churchill gin in the hands of the Capone underworld gang. To get control o f a couple of hundred million dollars in this fund the New Dfeal has attempted to smear those in charge o f it. Charges of political activity have been filed under the fed- ral law. The hearing began to get out of control when Gov. Bricker showed fight to protect the fund. ■If such tactics are to be forced on Ohio, Greene county Republicans have several concrete violations of Roosevelt ap pointees for being actively engaged in politics last fall.- They have been .kept in cold storage for just .such events as have arisen. The part a Democratic farmer was asked to take by a representative of the AAA in the Rposevelt election would be another chapter*of interesting reading, ‘ The consideration would shock even a federal judge and jury. , The Republican organization in every county in Ohio can supply the Governor with ammunition in or put of court on violations , of ’the Hatch law by New Dealers' for 1 political activity. . .7 . *’ ■. r - - - - ■ • • - ■ * - ; ' . --TT •--t -A- AID FOR BLOODY JOE The founders of the house of Morgan must be uneasy in their graves at the tidings that the son of one of them is ap pearing in the role of undercommissar for the defense of soviet Russia. In that capacity E. R, Stettinius has just informed a senate committee that the 13 billions already'voted for.pouring down the lend-lease rat hole will be. insufficient and that an other gargantuan grant will shortly be requested for. aid to the supreme monster, Stalin. ( It is ridiculous that any sane man should wish to go to the aid of a government which, since its founding, has done everything in its power to undermine the institutions of free dom in this country. It is ridiculous that'any sane man should have the slightest ; faith that Stalin, who brought on the war- by selling out the democracies, will not sell them out again and make another ideal with Hitler. There is not the slightest guarantee that the .weapons delivered to him tomorrow will not be used the next day against those who deliver them. • It is ridiculous, regardless of the wisdom,or propriety of aiding Stalin, to talk of sending him any large quantities of munitions over the road existing for such deliveries. Those routes were analyzed only the other day in the Tribune. They are so long and so tortuous, that they can supply at best only a few divisions in an army of hundreds of divisions. But the most ridiculous thing of all is to talk- of further appropriations for defense or for the manufacutre of munitions, regardless of where those munitions are to be used, when there is not the slightest possibility, according to Mr. Stettinius’ own testimony, that American industry can get around to filling those orders for at least two years. According to the calcula tions of the senate, subcommittee which heard him, the amounts „made avalable for rearmament, either through direct appro priations or through appropriations to the Reconstruction Fi nance Corporation, now.total 62 billion.dollars. Mr. Stettinius told the subcommittee that American industry is now filling its orders at the rate o f a billion dollars a month or 12 billion dollars a year. He assumed that next year it will be possible to step Up production to an annual total of 18 billion dollars and that the following year production will be still further in creased to the annual total of 30 billion dollars, If American industry meets the highest expectations of the administration it will thus produce in the three*years, 1941* 1942, and 1943, a total o f 60 billion dollars’ worth of defense materials. By this calculation we will go into the year 1944 with two billion dollars still unexpanded out of the appropria tions already made. ■ * Mr. Roosevelt is playing his old game, the same game he played for eight years without curing the domestic ills of the nation or making a significant dent in the unemployment rolls. As usual his only prescription for any ill is the appropriation o f greater and greater sums of money. That the same adminis trative incapacity that frustrated his. domestic policies is mak ing a tragic joke of the armament program does not deter him from asking for still more appropriations, „ Those further appropriations would be meaningless. It is guns, not dollars, that are needed. By Mr. Roosevelt’s own ad mission no tanks have yet been purchased from the lend-lease appropriations that-already total 13 billions. Neither have any planes, according to Congressman Woodrum, who guided the second lend-lease bill through'the house. Such lend-lease de liveries as have been made were made by stripping our own forces of vitally needed arms. Congress should call a halt to further votes of money, what ever pretext is advanced for asking them. By the administra tion's own admission, what has already been appropriated can not be spent for more than two years. What is needed now is some congressionl supervision over the wild spending of this money, in an attempt to insure that the nation gets some re turn/ At least, for the remendous sacrifice being asked of it, — Chicago Tribune, JS ary Cooper As War Hero In “ Sergeant York” ■ Bsat the liKiht Afoko reservation* now tor ‘'Sergeant York." the picture of the year, opening with a gata premiere at 11:30 P. M. Saturday and continuing, through Thursday, at the Xenia theater, It's GSry Cooper in his greatest role—It’s Warner Brother’s finest S uction. “Sergeant''York'1’ is the story of America's soldier , the one-man army from tehneBsee. It'S a picture every American will trant to See, a picture every American can be proud of. Don't delayt Tickets are now on sat*. Be among the first •* see Oary Coe?** A* “Sergeant .York!,’! IMRIH Gov. John W. Bricker received a vindication from the criticism o f the bosses o f the big^ cities irrespective of politics, when the cities in general voted, down all tax levies and certain bond issues for operation o f municipal government, The ’ bosses have been demanding that the Governor call a special session o f the legislature to distribute a sales tax surplus but the governor insists on paying, a state debt he inherited from a former ad ministration. When mpre tax revenue is asked for in most of the cities it is rejected on popular vote yet the1 bosses continue, to insist on more money out o f the state treasury. The decision o f the Governor is backed generally by all classes o f citizens. For pure nerve, if hot Ignorance, the request o f Sec. Hull* asking little Finland, to stop fighting Russia be cause'Stalin asks it, is beyond any thing o f the; kind In modern or ancient history. It was only about eighteen months ago the U. S- and England were backing Finland with words in her fight when the Russian bear was crowding that small band of Christian people that suffered- torture in hold ing back the Stalin, forces from tak ing their home land. Since then Churchill and Roosevelt have been on both sides o f Stalin’s war, for and against. Now the little Finnish peor pie, the only European nation that has paid a cent on the first World War debt, is pounced upon by the English lion and Churchill calls Roosevelt to become the big bad wolf and force '’ inland to give in to the Russian nonster. Hull, the Southern .f.‘ce- trade Democrat, plays the roll o f the pimp for Churchill, much to the dis grace o f every true blooded Ameri can citizen. Certainly the-God-fearing church element in this country can not uphold* Hull’s hands in the most dartardly attack.that could be cast against a so-called Lutheran nation. Hull’s position is only the fore-runner o f what can be expected o f the liber tine New Dealers in control in 'Wash ington that hold to this belief that di vorce and subsequent marriage on .a commercial scale legalizes adultery as a cloak o f respectability for official Washington. . -v, 4 Of all the shortages in various every day needs is paper stuck for boxes and cartons. The war is requiring millions of pounds o f card board aiid container stock to pack munitions of all kinds to say nothing o f what is required to ship canned foods to Eu ropean nations. Most paper stock goes to*the furnace during the winter months and cannot be used a second time either for packing or being re made into new stock in box board. The government is asking the public to conserve on all boxes. City stores are asking that Christmas purchases be wrapped at home as material for this purpose, will be scarce and high priced. The time is not far away when news print will, be scarce.„ Papers of all kinds will be higher priced and the quality will-not be what it has been, The colors have been ’ ’ lited to five by the government. Chlorine is used to bleach paper and it has been put oh the restricted list and white papers will in time have a yellowish cast. The coal strike under Roosevelt or ders does not seem to be making head way on settlement between John L. Lewis fo r ‘the miners and Myron L. Taylor for the steel companies that own private mines. Both arc standing pat regardless o f -Roosevelt’s order for aft effort o f settlement. A radio news commentator Wednesday states' that Lewis will get what he wants when the settlement is made. This is correct. Companies that have been taken over by the government where strikes stopped defense production have granted increased’ wages and the cost assumed by the government at the expense of the taxpayers. Nine out o f ten strikes for higher wages on government have resulted in high er wages and the government allow ing the companies to add the cost to the government. In the mine controversy Lewis ar gued about the closed shop on the following basis. He says 95 per cent of the miners in the steel company mines are organized. He says 60 per cent of the owners of all coal mines have signed up for the closed shop plan, Mere is where Lewis hitshinder the Roosevelt belt. He pointed out in the hearing that Roosevelt was elected by only 54-plus voters in 1941, but he noted the other 46 per cent abided by the outcome. ’ He says he might own $100,000 worth of shares in U. S. | Steel, lie would have to abide by the ■ decision of the small group of stock- 1 holders that own the majority interest in the company. He admits that Tay lor acknowlcgcs the fairness of his argument. It is a peculiar setup Roosevelt made when he asked Taylor to confer with iiewis on the strike situation, Back in NBA days Taylor, as head o f U. S„ Steel held out against Lewis and Ro'osevclt on the wage qu -stion and closed shop plan for I). S, Steel plants, Taylor was converted when Roosevelt urged him to sign the Lewis closed t&ui I s return ym gW*» nearly *U t t # government atoel or ders, rsgardlejp qf bids frpm other steel companies, which had open shop. Since the last national election Lewis apd Roosevelt have been cool to each other. All admit Lewis can yet ap ply the heat on the White House that will burn the fringe on' the lace cur tains whan he exposes corruption in the last election and the union gift o f $500,000 tp the Democratic cam paign fund In the first Roosevelt elec tion. Fin this on your hat band: ’‘Lewis will get the decision in the bout with Taylor and, Roosevelt." But Uncle Sam will pay the bill withou Comment. There the issue will di- and the public will be let in on ar other new "emergency.". . * In q speech Sept. 21, 1939, Roose velt said: “ This government will in list that American citizens and Ameri can ships "keep away from the inv mediate perils of the actual zone of conflict." Continuing he says, “ I want contraband cargoes to be. carried in the purchasers’ own ships at the pur chasers’ own risk.” That was, before he became converted to Communism. A great howl has gone up in the daily press and from the New Deal Communist headquarters about ap proval last Friday by the/sub-agri- culture committee approving ceilings for farm prices but not until after they had reached 130 o f parity, The base taken was from 1919. to 1929 during a period o f good times. I f the bill becomes a law rto farm price be low what they were October 1, 1941, will be permitted. This is the first sign o f fair play for the farmer from the New Deal controlled committees. The Wickard Communists in the Ag. department had picked out the depres- „icn period of. 191-4 for a parity basi^ when farm prifces were low. To sell the idea to farmers who the New Dealers thought did not think for themselves the: AAA was pressed into service to wave a bribe'check in the farmer’s face and sell him the shell game with the soap squares missing under each shell. Congress has been hearing from the “ thinking farmers”, and the new parity was proposed. If it should be adopted Uncle Joe Mason will have ,to travel the county to in form the farmers that swallowed the New Deal poison they had better take a sedative to kill the poison. Secre tary Wickard, throws out the “infla tion'’ scare this'week, if farmers de mand higher prices. Roosevelt follows with one o f these longer houi;s and more sacrifice speeches to help his old pal, Joe Stalin in his fight with Hitler. What.the farmers should de mand is a public list o f Democrats- New Dealers-’that are purchasing- the Roosevelt defense bonds. That really would be interesting reading. Such a list would show just how deep an in terest the Roosevelt followers had in their Chief's war in Europe. Wanted—Wood cutter that can drive car. 200 or 300 cord o f wood to cut. Reside with Harlan Ross. 50-2x | A NAME THAT STANDS f j FOR GOOD | furn i ture ! . 1 BUDGET PLAN | AVAILABLE ] Adair’s N. Detroit St. * Xenia. O. § Friday AND Saturday Twin Thrill Days! --------- SCREEN--------- “ International Squadron” Opens With Premiere Showing Saturday 1 1 :3 0 P .M . And Continues Through THURSDAY Everyone Says - - * r PRICES’ For This Picture Only Matinee 40c Night .............. *........... 660 Kiddie* ......................... 1?o F a rm e r s ! . . NO HUNTING = — ■ OB ..... - TRESPASSING WITH DOG OR GUN ON THIS FARM S i g n s S h o u l d B e ~ P o s t e d . . . . I f . . ♦ *. , « .. 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