The Cedarville Herald, Volume 64, Numbers 27-52
o wm*m imam, i m h u,mi !*■* « '■#■■ i.WUiMI-jylU-JUSI* I It Y R I C l P A E T f t l t® H 1 R A P "STT B T O — EDITOR. A N » PUBLISHER MMwMA»***. j CM* KewwM»*FA*«e.j VM - Y*U«y M m A mos . WV + vm va ***W| */v**»*v«W j WH October 81 ,188 ?, ns second ohuui matter. Friday, November 14, 1941 CHICKENS COME HOME TO BOOST . WHERE IS THAT BIG PROFIT YOU GET? / ■ • , •* .■ Both Roosevelt, the New Deal dictator managing Joe Sta lin’s war against! Hitler, and Secretary Morgenthau come out fo r a. fifteen percent payroll tax to help reduce this “ wild spending” you as a farmer or wage earner have been engaged, in during the war boom. The New York Fifth Avenue boys fear inflation and Would take up that extra money in your pocket fearing you will buy so much we would be plunged into inflation which, according to their-views, is far worse than war in Europe. Roosevelt demands that Congress pass such a law that would force fifteen per cent deduction from every pay check in the factory , farm, school, college, department store or office in the nation. It would mean that James Smith, farm hand be ing paid $15 a week would have $2.25 deducted to send to Roosevelt to pay fo r the part we are having in the European war. I f a school teacher draws $120 a month, the sum o f $18 would have to be deducted fo r the war fund. I f a girl received $10 a week clerking in a store or office out would come $1.50 to keep her from “ over-spending” as Roosevelt^says, bringing on inflation. . . . . . . , , , W ord we get from Washington is that every department in Washington, including congressmen and senators, a flood o f mail and telegrams has come from citizens o f all classes, all asking where this'excess money is, each declaring they have received none o f it. . . . , ” _ , Vice President Wallace suggests to head off inflation each purchase o f ten cents or more be accompanied by the purchase £>f a one dent defense stamp on the same plan as sales tax Stamps. With increased security taxes up to twelve per cent, higher income taxes and the proposed 15 per cent payroll tax, the tax payers may get a belly full o f the Roosevelt-Churchill- Stalin war program. ,, _ u But that is not all, the ace card is ye t up the Roosevelt sleeve. A fter the 15 per cent on payrolls he is to advocate a five per cent transection tax with no exemptions. This would je the same as a federal sales tax on all purchases and service iharges o f any kind. You are not expected'to ob ject out loud either to the new tax >r the European war program o f . the New Deal; To do so would be grounds fo r a charge o f disloyalty and a supporter i f Hitler. • ‘ The situation as we see it is Roosevelt, Hitler or Stalin, fake your choice* » . . . V I f ever a president o f the United States had the opportun ity o f reaping what he had sown, Franklin'D. Roosevelt is en titled to that honor, good o r bad, The labor policy o f the New Deal has been one o f terror sanctioned by Roosevelt as well as his feminine secretary o f labor in the- cabinet who is recog nized as a Communist leader. ' Back in the early days o f the first campaign Roosevelt- gave labor organizations assurance o f his open support on all labor demands, reasonable or unreasonable. This opened the way fo r all sorts o f labor racketeers to ply their trade to club business management, large and small, as well as shakedown laboring men and women f o r unreasonable initiation fees and monthly dues. * The whole Michigan labor disturbance grew as Roosevelt permitted it to grow through 'the inactivity o f the then Gov. Murphy, New Dealer, to enforce even the law o f the land to jproteet private property from invasion and damage. To. pay Murphy fo r his part in the invasion, Roosevelt names him as a member o f the Supreme Court. John L, Lewis, long a labor leader who had disagreed with the American Federation of labor and had w ithdrawn his allegiance from that organiza tion, formed what we now have as. the C, I. O, Having millions at his command with hundreds o f .thousands o f votes in num erous states, Lewis gave the Democratic National Committee a loan o f $500,000 fo r the party corruption fund to help pur chase the election fo r Roosevelt. Roosevelt had made unlimited promises to Lewis to help build a labor empire in the nation to control all future elec tions. As time went* on Roosevelt saw the possibility o f Lewis becoming a dictator, somethipg he himself cherished as presi dent. There arose differences between the two and Lewis broke , after Roosevelt had deceived the .former on two different oc casions. The actual break came previous to the last national election. It has come from Lewis headquarters that Roosevelt expected the last national election to be the final one in this country i f we entered the .European war, Roosevelt was to once more declare a “ national emergency” and suspend any future elections fo r president during the war, which he boast ed would last at least ten .years. The nation has been on the anxious seat over the conten tions between Lewis as head o f the miners and the New Deal and the threatened coal strike which is set fo r Saturday. In addition several thousand railroad employees expect to strike early •in December along w ith . many thousand other labor Union members who are expected to strike voluntarily if Lewis does not have his way. This week the CIO members in many key positions in a Wholesale manner, thus creating a situation unknown in American government. Even leaders o f the op position American Federation o f Labor are backing Lewis in his demand fo r a “ closed shop” , something Roosevelt himself has advocated and supported against Henry Ford and other industrialists. It is not our purpose to defend or criticize John L. Lewis at this time, our-position on the" New .Deal situation being known to every reader. Roosevelt has promised labor more than he can deliver. This in turn has angered labor union mem bers who have been promised fo r years the strength o f theii organization was in forcing the closed shop on all industry. Roosevelt now faces a far more important “ emergency’ than even the European war and his interest in Bloody Jot Stalin has created. He has deceived the average American citizen while he has openly lied to labor. The day o f reckoning is at hand. Whether Lewis wins what he wants at this time is not so important to the nation. It is important that the cor rupt labor ring iri official Washington with tenants in every industrial city in the land b.e broken. If John L. Lewis can do that he will win he plaudits o f the electorate. As we see it Roosevelt faces a situation with his hands tied. He can neither go backward or forward and please either side, labor or in dustry, or even his Democratic congress, It is the White House that must be cleaned to rid the na- tion o f the Communistic element that Roosevelt placed in prominent “tovernment positions as payment fo r support at the polls. In barnyard parlance, politically speaking, “ Kill the old sow and the pigs -will die.” „„ n itn - T-T — ............... .............................................. . — D E M A N D — f “ F & H” Meat Products j — T H E Y A R E B E T T E R — f rink & Heine Co. Roosevelt end Wendell Wilikie have teamed to purge all congressmen and senators that do net, take orders.and go down the line for Bloody Joe Stalin in his war against Hitler. Both have cut a large order, if t)iey can do what they say they will attempt. Roose velt is to fight Democrats and Repub- licans that will not get do\yn on their knees before him while Wilikie says he will stay in his “ own party" and trounce the boys out for congress on the Bepublican side o f the fence. Will- kie chooses to be th e ,water-boy for the New Deal to pay hack Roosevelt for the free trip at the expense of American taxpayers when the defeat ed “ Republican nominee took the air- flight to London to have a session with Churchill some months ago," Just how Wilikie figures he can do any purging is more than Republicans can understand. .He was never in the Republican party before the conven tion in Philadelphia, and won with the “millions o f Wall Street” back of him. At a recent meeting o f Republican' editors in Indiana at French Lick, a resolution was adopted to kick Will- kie out o f the party if he considered himself in. Cong, Hallack, who made the nomination speech for Wilikie at Philadelphia, is now against his for mer idol and so expressed himself to the editors o f his state. Hallack was and is still a Republican. -Here is what Roosevelt said about Stalin and Russia on* February 10, 1940. Read and reflect? “ The soviet union, as a matter of practical fact, known to you and known to all the world, is a dictator ship as absolute as any other dicta torship in the world. It has allied it self with another dictatorship and it has invaded a neighbor (Finlund) so infinitesimally small that it could do no injury to the soviet union, and seeks only to live in peace as a demo cracy, and a liberal and forward look ing democracy at that." It must have been a grand and glor ious drunk down in Washington when the New Dealers -swilled in Russian vodka, champagne and English gin last Friday night to celebrate Roose velt's loan, without authority o f Con gress o f a billion dollars to Stalin’s government, where wholesale murder of religious leaders was more com mon than the slaughter o f an inno cent lamb. Free Trader ,Hull, who fills the chair as secretary o f state/ communicating New . Deal orders formulated by Communists in govern ment departments, had just ordered little Finland to stop fighting Russia. There was still red blood in the necks of that little band o f Lutheran follow ers and they threw the'haml-granadc back into Hull’s-lap, where it yet re poses. Finland, being the only Euro pean nation to make payment on the first World War debt is no longer fighting a just war according to the new Roosevelt yardstick. However, she has had nerve enough to issue, a defiant statement in answer to Hull and just as'much as told him to tend to his own business. r»w famiftsa, all d*jKH«kmt on war industry labor in factories or at Wright or Esbhjjpwn fields* In tHa de fense area it is claimed 85,000 families have moved in and living in any kind o f a house, Some have space in hams and hundrdea in trailer*,* A prominent citizen in Dayton several day* ago stated upon commenting about the de feat o f the relief issue in Greene coun ty,at the last election, that when the war was ended Dayton would have fifty thousand people without per manent homes or means o f support and the city would have to-feea them. Meantime Dayton voters turned down all extra tax levies. The next thing you will hear is that the rural coun ties must help as they were forced to do under the Pavey administration when a state tax was forced to provide relief , in cities that would not vote txtra levies for feeding their own peo ple. The same situation exists in .Gin cinnati, Cleveland, Toledo and other Ohio cities. Thousands o f southern families drifted north because old, age pensions are higher in this state and cities and counties gave rpore lavish ly in all kinds o f relief. J THE SAME OLD “CON” GAME JUST PUTYOUR . HONEY. 1 NHERE/ YOU ABSOLUTELY CAN'T LOS e T Clif Stratton, Washington corres pondent for the Ohio Farmer, takes off the lid and comments on carined statements, on AAA activities as-not coming from local chairmen o f the AAA but from Washington with the name of the county chairman to be filled in. He 7 says these statements would show local" committeemen to be authority on ecoi omics, national politics, .international, (relations and world affairs in general. He failed to say all county committeemen were forced tqfpreach defense and sell Rus sia to the farmers. This column gets the tip from Washington that the de fense food program- was formed not for England or Russia but to glut the market to force down prices tor the city-folks to make it a bit easier for the Roosevelt proposed 15 percent pay roll tax; City folks champing at the bit on the cost o f food prices and Washington listens first to that vote. The farmer, is only the goat because? he is being made overly rich by the present day market prices and it is he who must be haltered to hold down 'Socialist, who has held the balance of Titlira. Nov. 191 Bing!Crosby -"In■ “ Birth of the Blues” With Mary Martin B t Frf. NoV. .14 j If radio and news reports.are true the Russian Communists, including the Roosevelt Communists in govern ment departments must have had the, big head the following day. Reports are' that all sorts o f drinks were serv ed to the starch-shirted crowd ■with bars on three floors o f the embassy and New Dealers in rowp six- deep and all full o f caviar and Vodka. Each wore or waved a small Red Flag. The guest list at the banquet tabic, where gold and silver in splendor graced a huge four-tier cake, were Mr. and Mrs, Henry. A. Wallace, vice president o f the United States who with the Hulls, Welles, and a lot of other top New Dealers who gathered to pay homage to “Bloody Joe” , The Wall Street war mongers were there in droves but there were no Wheelers, Clarks, Lindberghs or other so-called isolationists. None o f these could bathe.their feet in* that great silver bowl from whence champagne punch was served and toasts given in honor o f the blood-thirsty atheistic dictator Stalin, The Wallace background of; a grandfather who weathered the storms .and hardships o f the Iowa frontier as a United Presbyterian minister had evidently been left along the banks o f the Potomac river while he shouted the praise o f his absent host 'on that occasion, The AAA farm clement has something to be* proud o f in being a part o f the Communist gang in Washington that is doing a good job selling this nation down the river, economically and morally, Xn R ot . spot ” ir, WUh • 1 SC‘T VVa‘ «ro Carole Undia I J L 2 B ig Hit* “ Swing It Soldier” With Ken Murray Also “ Buy Me That Town” . W ith L lo y d Nolaw •at, Nov. t6 ! IF YOUNEDPRINTING, DROP IN Dayton newspapers have been fea turing stories o f the manner in .which transit labor for war industries have, been herded in cheap rooming houses. In some o f the down-town dwellings as many as fifty or seventy persons live, one third o f whom may be child ren. In many o f the houses there is but one bath room and the rental o f i bed-space amounts in some cases to around $350 a month, Sanitary condi tions are said to be terrible, The in flux pf cheap labor froin southern states has loaded the city and sur rounding territory with some 15,000 E ld o r a d o ” With Tom Tyler —Plus— “ Jtingle Man” • With IL*. BMi,terCralbfi« Bun: Mon. Tua* •penoar Tracy “Dr«.,Jakyl| and Mr. Hyda” Also . . “ Mountain Moonlight” Woavar Bros. ■ Pioksd and fallen apples fo r mb * * Golden Delirious, CsdgrWUs Federal Savings & Loan Assm, o r W . L. WR*( son. . Wanted to B u y -^ ld and salvaged oars, iron, rags .and metal, Emmett Evilsizori West Xenia A v e , CedarviOe i S ubegbibz T o T his H juuld FA RM 4 % LOANS No application fee. NO appraisal! fee. Refinance yopr loans * t the lowest interest rates ever offend,! McSavaney A Co. Louden, O. Call or Write LEON H. KLING Cedarville. O. ‘ Phone; 6-1901 'Bargain Hour, t1o 'till 2 F r iday ANP 'S a t u r d a y w. c. Fields In “ Never Give a Sucker An Even Break” wrHR ii nvjurj » i that terrible bug-a-boo o f inflation. The Republicans down in Cincinnati took control o f that city at the recent municipal election with Mayor James Stewart, formerly o f Springfield head ing the ticket. The city for twelve years has been ruled by what was known as the Charter Group, an in dependent political organization for local activity only, Herbert Bigelow, power between,the two factions .went Brown fn the .Akron Beacon Journal dowrl with defeat as did his proposal to havej;he^city bond itself for $ 100 ,- 000,000 to enter the municipal electric field. The narrow escape o f Russell Wilson, former mayor, who trailed the 1 list o f nine winners, was a surprise, Wilson, a well-known former news paper man, took up the Roosevelt foreign policy, and came near being defeated, many wards that had al ways supported him turning, against him this time. - Sunday, Monday Tuesday - ‘ LANK rV ■- G A B L E n • f\ * LANA . T U R N E R HflNKyTONK WE PAY CASH FOR THE FOLLOWING Fence Wire. . $ 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.) Delivered Our Yard, South Burnett Road and Big 4 Railroad Kasle Steel Compressing Co. Phoe 1740 : Springfield, Ohio Speed aloft meads speed on the ground . More p ilo ts and planes mean more training Gelds and more plants to turn-out planes; And that means more telephones to speed up air operations and indus trial operations, Telephone dreuits and services are “ on call’ * every hou r o f thq tw en ty -four ,fo r the speed ing up o f management, machinery and materials all along,, the line in the aviation industry throughout Ohio and the flatiOn. Recognizing the importance o f that’ job* the telephone industry is doing Its part to “ Keep ‘Em Plying,** IrUNE IN “ THE TELEPHONE HOOK” EVERY MONDAY EVENING At | O’CLOCK OVER WTAM, WlW AND WSPD THE OHIO BELL TELEPHONE CO. layer- housed f tack o f i out Thur Mr. an Bouncing Bradley, field City Miss R covering operation in Dayto Mr, an have retu- where th. , wedding a the forme Millan an sister of two broth joint wed joint anni MrL and family ent Mr. and O. , Mr. a- Springbor anon, Ohio . Powers an darville. A Turke Methodist nesday, De P. M. in t nasium. Mr. Fr and Mrs, a badyly f near Ft. K motor in c draftees f left the ro taken to Knox. ,His left Sunda be returne as he is a' For Ced •nititiiiiiiniiiii ■1•"■ * Regis Cla Enro Prac Xen- iiiiiiiitiiim ■Xk v# < 1 * .t,*Y -*-•*** * 4 fc-4 7 ,*'^
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