The Cedarville Herald, Volume 65, Numbers 27-52
* M »| | | g te| fMfeyyMk ' g M u k : jA W * WA jM fiM W f* 3mm tf> tSMtt W H EA T F A M * * R i T O M l THE G O A T : SdSftttt ■tOrttffO WMUtfl f o r th * p r « - ttfcfcj* w no rauabJe iafor8a*tion Tfe* m b m h m b _________ _____ _________ _________________ ________ ***** tmmm rate rat «twwr* and mm fe# immai to afera tfe* ■«w» *» ffc» ttoffi**t tfe* iWc « f dsmtaft fmm 9m oOm natural omm* wfa«r« !n»«ste owiaot bt gowd*4 •ssbrat* Tli® 1SMUS wrfe#*t cron farmor la t* fee tfe* vieUm o f thfe •ttttatkm all due to the AAA fantasttd lafeuded Cotntminlsfo that head the Agricultural P*p*rtmwrt ani. have been uaiag the grain situation to beep the farmer regimented fo r political pur posed, . - ■ ■ ■ ■ . « . . The government has fought every, effort in and out of con- grew to force the sale o f the surplus grain fo r commercial pur poses. This would relieve storage space fo r the present oncom ing crop and at the same time act as a governor to regulate the price o f wheat to the farmer under a natural law o f supply and demand. The Springfield Sun, Wednesday, carries m article stating that 50,000 bushels o f wheat owned by the government is be ing moved out o f local elevators into steel ptorage bins, which originally were made to care fo r the 1042 crop, if AAA reports can be believed. Even moving this wheat from the local eleva tors where it has been held nearly a year, the elevator service will be limited fo r the 1042 crop in Clark county. Once more If the wheat had been converted into commercial alcohol, most; o f which is n o tfit for human consumption, the government would have the money"fcnd the farmer would be. able to get storage’ in a building equipped to dry and protect the grain from insects, whidh the farmer cannot do on his own farm. Just how much longer farmers will continue to swallow as gospel truth mimeographed statements^ from AAA offices that have been dictated by the Communists in- Washington, we are unable to say. One thing is certain the bureaucrats A l t a A * A 1 M A l e w i f ThwNi i§ m Uddtitec tidv ww ifc at Otetor Pelwfc, 0H tfe gaw ds- ttai « f 9 bmh * w ■mmMiAbtBFir in jgfefe4PfeU<epfe^m^Wm jg Ohio, private sad but suwwrted, is up iprVmt wgBlwwi waster war order* a* to mm at asrtafe suppliee t&t vd I cmd e t tfe >rminis An wdwra stand sad a*siB»* I* w5i fe no power is r tfe bom mowar*. No tdfefin* for tractor* apd track* aa weB w so tir** at area tfe modern cemetery baa rubber Wheelbarrows. No gaseliae la provided tor those who must travel to work in cemeteries. The superintendent o f a nearby city cemetery informs us they lawn mow 217 acres about each ten days in mid summer, All this is done by power where possible. It require* trucks to haul dirt to till graves and for general upkeep o f the grounds, a service long promised all lot owners and guar anteed under endowment deeds when lots have been sold. Row to meet all this with, increased labor cost and low er endownment income under New Heal dreaming has the cemetery man agement in all Ohio perplexed as to settlement. du| iA y A f t J L uh w m A I l 9 |M i epihw wtora- pgrarai ▼ ^mw piga be use surjdus gaeibt fey ynths ids rubber. The a ^.* *ewe4wi sfhwt ' 1 M N M I t h f e - 1 * — JM tT M L M i I S ■uw^wews^fe^fef UMUw #vw be reduced agate ter the IMS ate*. See. W tlaee hee ae aura. Interact hi ♦fe jtMmtom meturiet er even upp thetie rubber teem mwpfaw grate tbm Chairman fee Steam o f ifti* eegIS* Both mw subject M the “hire had fire’* rule ef the Nwr Peel dyneety and carry order* «r peddle such re port* as eeeae from the propaganda k Weatiiinilmi «<aeeetsd •w* w*me^'eaiwmswev^n at a cost o f m m jm ht taxpayer's in come tax money teat might have been used to purchase a few tanks, jeep* or bomba for the Japs. drawing wore money annually, including the AAA salary eat ers, have no occasion to -worry about wpat becomes, o f the wheat crop o f the average fanner. They go on the assumption that’when you take a $heat loanr you Iiave been haltered for the duration end become helpless, t ' We were informed some'days ago that a nearby elevator that'held, several hundred thousand bushels ,o f government wheat-hail been cleared o f the 194J crop and would not be available this year for any government loan wheat for storage. Meantime you will continue to get “ barn-yard chaff" from the Washington Commuhists,through’ the local AAA offices. I f wheat is not used for alcohol and the New Deal does not make provision fo r the manufacture o f synthetic rubber from wheat by private capital that is ready to erect such factories, wheat will fa ll below 90c a bushel. How many, farmers have Written to ,the White House urging the use o f wheat fo r al cohol or fo f synthetic rubber? - > DISTRIBUTING THE WAR TAX LOAD The American people are at last learning ohe inescapable fact—everyone, must help, pay for this war. The old slogan, “ Soak the rich," no longer has any meaning. ' : ’ The new tax bill goes down into income brackets never be fo r e reached. And, in the view o f economists who. deal with .facts, not hopes, it will not be long before the people of small and moderate means will have td be hit harder still. The people in the middle and high income brackets are already paying just about all the traffic will bear without total confiscation, o f in come. We can*t substantially increase taxes on industry with out depriving it o f the money that is vital to its progress, ex pansion and solvency. Nothing is left saveto turn to thelower- income groups—and those groups are the groups which, for the most part, are receiving the bulk o f the vastly increased pur chasing power, resulting from war expenditures. The annual income tax will hot be adequate, Some system for collecting taxes,, in part,-on a monthly bases will b e put ■ into effect. Dire necessity Is also likely to force- the passage o f a general sales tax.. This should have one good effect On the American people, It will give many o f thenr, for the first time, a knowledge o f their own stake in the goyernment. It will prove to them that .governmental spending comes out o f their own pocketa and is their own business. Every American, whether he earns ten pr a thousand dollars a week, must join in demanding"that all government noh-war spending be^cut to the bone—-and that every frill, ev e r y luxury, every non-essential, be immediately eliminated. It is essential to curb government spending, as well as personal spending, to check inflation. LABOR u n io n s a f a v o r e d c l a s s Labor unions are among the biggest business in the United States. Their total income from initiation fees ahd monthly dues, reaches an astronomical figure, <■ » These unions, however, kre‘ very-different in certain vital respects from other enterprises. They are not subject to regula tion. They do not have to register with the government or make periodic financial statements. Their.take is not subject to tax ation. ■ •Spokesmen for labor have bitterly fought the mildest pro posals fo r requiring the unions to register with government, and to publish public statements o f their financial standing, as required o f other business. The unions demand special privi leges not accorded other business. They want to remain a favored class.' - Coming T o The Xenia Sunday 1M4 ttMMt 8*4* hteurtlf s«tmt»d*4 fey * fftiip of Hollywood’s stool fcomfttel etmm (td* is tfets toont* froi* tho t(OM wasiosi, *IN# After, la wMok I* si***. *le*g vritfe Wmaot fMrs)!. Tfe# n»w fjtet oyoas Mater ** tes X mi * fitosteb .. sm m w m and sale ads pay Republican leaders are nob having cnuch to say about the New Peal J‘war order” that all county fairs should be iiacontinued to ’‘save rubber.” In Greene counjty the greatest possible distance a resident could travel to get » q Xenia for the county fair would b® ibout fifteen miles. However, if you wanted to go to Cincinnati V -see a light baseball game, yon can travel more than one hundred miles, use gas oline and'rubber to see a game under dectric light-while the New Deal syn hetie, politicians rant and preach Mbout saving electric power for War reeds. We suggest that each Demo cratic candidate campaign on'the "no ’air issue,” or i f not satisfied with hat take a chair in- the “sugar line”, courthouse basement, and hear the laity comment -about the New Deal, .t is -a. fine place for a Democratic publisher to get first hand j^formation s to what the. people ate talking ibout and what they have t o . say tbout “beer "for the babies instead o f milk”. ■ We have been interested in the New fork political situation Where former >osfmaster general, .James Farley,' old his candidate to.FDR,' who had mce said another Democratic nominee hould get first place for governor. -Now the American party, aid society 'A Communist* .for the New Deal in that state, goes on .record against both Farley-and Roosevelt and will have its own nominee. The American forty has several hundred thousand rotes that have -been .going to New Deal rather than support jits own nominee. It looks like Thomas Dewey, Republican nominee, as the next gov ernor o f New York.. Republicans are jeered about politics in war time bnt the New Deal keeps playing the Dem- cratic game day after day using, war contracts and federal power to insure success 'in primaries and at regular elections. . Marshall Field, multimillionaire, of Chicago, who has lived more, days in London titan the U, S. A., owns a sen sational NeW York newspaper called “PM”., that has been the mouthpiece of the New Deal. Ralph M, Ingorsoll, editor of P. M.> has been called for in- duction'into the army. Field, although urging this nation to tike up Eng land’* war cause, appealed for defer ment of Ingorsoll, but without suc cess. The editor was pictured by Field as “indispensable” to. the New'Deal cause. FTeid started the Chicago Sun because Roosevelt and the New Deal could not dictate the policy o f the Chicago Tribune. Field is a big stock holder in the great Marshall Field Co., Chicago, and this firm recently served notice on its Chicago trade, that Mar shall had nothing to do with the policy of the company. The Tribune still Carries the store advertising. ‘ The itemocratic “Gustapo” organ ised in Ohio’ to ’pimp or snoop on all who take issue or criticise the New Deal on conduct o f the war, o* expose or object to legal grafting on war contracts, or favor a Democratic son on draft deferment over some other Ohio boy might look into the broad cast Saturday and Monday nights of the celebrated radio news commenta tor, Fulton Lewis over the mutual net work, Lewis simply took the hide off i lot o f«NeWDealers that are battling Jot control o f the rubber sltuatioit. He /pared no words, not in criticism but in reporting the rubber situation as he found it. This column last week referred to the battle of and for’ rubber, naming the oil intertsts, rubber teteresta. and farm element, all mixed with New' Deal,politics, Meantime it Was get behind the rubber scrap' campaign or walk as gasoline Would be cut off, not because there was a shortage but be cause eastern states in misery liked company and demanded that Ohio, Indiana and Illinois as well as other oil producing states get Rationing cards.’ New York’s Socialist Mayor thinks it terrible that gasoline should he rationed there and not in Ohio, Lewis told his radio audience there was a company with *600,000,000 ready to erect mm or more plants to use surplus grain to manufacture syn thetic rubber. He repeated what New Deal distributors told him that they would not recognise any plan to use farm crop* for the new brand o f rub ber. Meantime motorists run the risk of walking or having the same kind o f rubber Hitler is using and has been using to carry his,war equipment in his-various attacks all over the world. It is the-battle o f dollars with the rub ber trust,- New Deal politicians hope ’to get rich over night but not Spokesman for the use of grain for synthetic rubber is permitted to have a word. Pearson and Alien, in their weekly broadcast refer to exposure that a New Dealer ' in; official Washington whs connected with a *25,000 f >in connection with the rubber situation, predicted that a grand jury in Wash ington would no doubt, return an in dictment. Many are skeptical about the prediction. A jury in Washing ton is' dependent upon a living di rectly or indirectly from a ‘ govern ment salary o f some federal contract. Indicting a New Dealer on an illegal fee proposal would .create as mtach of a sensation as If an Ohio AAA Com mitteeman should issue a public state-' irient- favoring the use o f surplus grain for .synthetic rubber or close night clubs along with county fairs— lo save robber and gasoline. Pearson and Allen7might run afoul with the New Deal “Gustapo” i f they even at tempt to eXppse a mere *25,000 graft, Lewis Inhis news reviewhag rend ered a great terries to the American We are now entering upon the dis cussion of- a dangerous subject, as Mich so as if We were to. inquire as to what “dug-out? We might find any me or all o f the.Roosevelt boys now serving their country—somewhere. It Jvill be recalled'FDR suggested all efelarite above *35,000 be confiscated for the government. In view o f the tact his salary is *75,000 FDR has not offered a statement o f any kind. In as much as a number o f New Dealers mjoy big salaries along with their talaris* in government jobs or some branch o f congress, the suggested cut did not'go well With the Democrats jnd the tax bill does not provide for the salary raid. Members o f the com mittee were keen to explain that the 1 institution prohibits either a reduc tion dr increase in a president’s salary of *75,000. It has been reported the income o f the Roosevelt family has been placed around *505,000 annually including royalties and broadcasts, al go including the million foliar estate received by will. It must be admitted FDR has an income of more than *25,- 300 outside of his *75,000 yearly sal ary as president. Congressional lead ers declined ip accept the Presidential suggestion of salary raid until the White House had more to say. But nothing has been said. Congress also <s aware that the treasury depart-* ment is forbidden under executive or der of making the income taxe return jf either Roosevelt or his family pub lic along with others who receive more than^5/KH) a year. The rap on the White House dbor for more in formation on salary raids remains unanswered to this date. Even Demo cratic papers fail to comment on the unusual salary raid suggestion. The safeet pi*** te aa air raid it at feme. H fm are away teem feme, gte muter sever te tfe i Avoid crowded pteaee. May off the streets, t f e enemy wants yo« to mm « # feta tfeteeeets, mrnjejt an*, start a panic. Don’t As R t /• If inmnefery fem fe teR. |tey « spray team a « fp iin ! « splash or stream} e£ water en 'tfe bomb. Switch * a stnmH^fe ynt eat any fire started by tfe bomb, Switch feeff te a spray fe r .tfe boa*. T fe bomb will bum teff shout f* minutes if teft.atene, mjbt * minutes .under a fine water spray. A jte epfauftv stream me feefet af water will make lt ;exidmte. . > ' Under raid condition*, keep a bathtub and buckets fe ll o f watci for the use of the fire department in cam water mains are broken. If you have a soda-and-add extinguisher (tile kind yen tarn up side down), use it with your finger over the nossle to make s spray. Don’t use the dbeuica) kind (small cylinders o f liquid) on bomba., 1* is all right for ordinary fires. . Bnt above all, keep cool, Stay home, - Choose one member of the family to be the home pir-wardeiH-whe will remember all the rules and what to do. Mother makes the feet, New York City complain*: in a loitd voice about unemployment and not more war contracts, Gasoline ration ing also is sinking its teeth into all vetai) outlets, Mayor LaGuardia says’ .hero are 440,000 Unemployed at pres- nt and conditions are growing worse daily. One large department store let /sore than 500 clerks go within the first two-week period of gasoline ra tioning. All retail business continues to drop daily. Misery loves company. That is why we have the threat of -asoline rationing in Ohio, New York -tate only purchased 83 per cent o f it* war,bond quota, FDR should speak to his neighbors about letting the New Deal down. - New‘York papers carry the story that 440,000 people are unemployed in that city due to’ two thing*, lack of War contracts and the gasoline ration ing. PTebsbly tfe voters will find tifet manna comes iro n labor, not from UncleBam as the New Deal has made them believe the past few years, Un der gas rationing as it ha* been con ducted it Is well that a few hundred thousand followers o f the Russion flag might walk the streets hunting for the next meal, American tryst. Nazi-victories on tfe English coast as well as on the Ameri can coast, awakened both nations. While both Churchill, a»,& socialist, and Rodievelt a* a New Dealer, what ever that means, try tq reform the world-and fight tho Axis at.the same time, the Nazi continue to march for ward, On the Atlantic bombing, American and -allied shipping .con tinues like school boy play. Reports give the shipping losses at 310 as late a* Wednesday. If the stuffed, shirt* in Washington do not get. .down to. winning the war instead’ qf tryihg(to*. tStalinisse- America, with Comiiimusts" dictating much,of our war policy^we, can expect serious cohsequence8'’’fpr months to come and meantime hear of the loss of thousands of our Ameri can hoys in service trying to protect England at our expense. - It may be that Roosevelt will have to accompany Churchill horn* from ! Overseas broadcasts',that the English- * matt must face a critical House of Parliament when be returns from hi* Harvard -University has been looked Upon the paat few years as the borne of genuine'Communism. Many of the Communists' appointed-by Roosevelt are graduates of .that institution, even members o f the U. S. Supreme Court. Several days ago we read a report oh a speech delivered by the Presi dent of 'that institution -which indi cate* there is a definite trend tq "a more conservative attitude towards pur form o f government; In tect the President took issue with many o f tfe dooseyelt-Wallace -views oit foreign policy after the war* .it read as if die institution head had discovered just where, his institution was headed fed was endeavoring to turn public sentiment to a more' conservative view. It certainly would not read well to tfe Roosevelt radicals. Wo wonder i f 't f e institution head fed,heard o f die part FDR and hi* Wife fed fed a jew years'ago in sending young radicals to various wealthy and influential citisefe iii an effort,t » ‘ sell tfe Russian plan o f government*’“A few o f these young Communists sent on that mission'have since been given places o f prominence In tfe New Deal government. , week was reported around 48 degree*. According to tfe Columbus weather records fibe record of 55 year* ago alas equaled for tfe same weik.' . Death For Col' Fairs (Continued from jlni page) wfet is Issued both in Germany and Russia,: The Ohjo State Fair .had- been die-- continued., week* *?° and the grounds - turned qyac to the government for storage purposes for war equipment. Tfe contract calls for fly e a r -r e n t al. A f anj£ -other rate Gov. Briefer1 woulcf have.been termed a slacker., Our neighbors with' Democratic „gpv- ,-ernors fared a bit better! -Indiana"gets^ a rental fo r' her state,,teir .grounds said to be *35,000 and in addition is to get a new. -building pohr being, erected 'by:'ihe government costing. *16Q,D09. Michigan fair .grounds has been rented to tfe. government for *28,000. These figure?,, should'be o f interest to Ohio Farmers^ ffe rp a fe H w ir t le 1 1 S f96 Friday ; R a d ’■ S a tu rd a y T w in T h r ift D ay * • — SCREEN— wM o o n t id e n | a y G a b in a n d I d a L u p i n o ___ S 8 fl.-« 0 H.-THES. It” , V MERCURY TAKES DROP Following a week of more or less rainfall the mercury has taken a du eled drop and several morning* this ment _ today ih Washington1regardless i heavy cost the. boarfi'fe s feen placed under preparing for tfe-annual event.' It was only » ,few months ago that Secretary of Agriculture Wickard is sued a statement that all county'fairs would be held as usual. But1 like,other Wickard statements his statements pnd.order* are subject to ferisionlby dhe red-fringe that-operates his de partment while he provides the win dow dressing- ‘ • Then cancelling'of alb fairs might fe a feodihfegandPtefellY^eilife managements should, not have pro tested, .It-would glto'the.farm ers more time to-follow ' the Roosevelt statement month* ago that ^Farmers would have toiwoxk '.mor^ and longer, hours for' the duration.” However, there Is nothing hinderingsall farmers to load up the -“blunderbus,” ‘filled with gas and race dawn tfe pike to the nearest city and give the kids a treat at what takes place in the latest of -all amusement centers, f’Hot-spot Night Clubs.” I'I'sr Jons . 2 s;] ___ _ , . f i . i J u n e . k o . i .' v “ They All w y [Kissed Thp Bride” IRENE ■pUNNE m w m POUGLAS •- Is fhuri” |uU» a %w j “MOON- TIDE" BUYWAR BONDS MAJESTIC Starring IDA LUPINO » JEAN ‘ GABIN “ M is te r "V * Plus “ Meet T h e June 2 1 4 Days S tu a rt8 bridle Howard, tfe dapper and handsome star of numerous film hits, return* to the screen in on# of his most exciting roles hero of the action-filled melodrtms, “Mister V,” to date a* th e __ _ ^,_,in.n- 1..r .7. frT.r Tt which is scheduled for iu first showing at the Majestic1theater theater on June i l through United Artists release, * * This hew picture, which combines melodrama with romance and comedy ahd is set in tfe Burope of todsy, Was also produced and directed by Mr< Howard and Is bejng presented -to screen nudiehces by Rdwatd Small. The story, briefly told, highlights the bold adventure* of Professor Horatio Smith, a teacher of archaeology *1 Cambridge, who, singlehanded, stages and tegtater* daring escapes Of antf Nasis from inside a*r»jw»* Wanted by the head of the Geetape fiJ V* •-WfWfeaa liberator, neterthelew, dar«« to go to Berlin and to attend an elaborate reception at tfe British em- bassy, where he comes face to face with tfe £Utt**a chief. . Howfeuanmtee to Steep hie Identity eeordaittoj*WM>tapfeh hi* daredevil festoeSi p*mr»ee fjtlstw ten- tlnnous suspense and. hteathfektoa d tem a jfi^H & Sm W the story unwind* with terrific impacti eg th 3 6 fiteR E *P w feB - the hero tciomr fete. 1 s «fes»y imucht again outwit* them. -r jfwj "V tu d ? * W « on tfe «wfes: A*1 « tfe feraete stettngs fe -the film S * fe .th e BritUh embassy in Bedfe, where tfe hero attends a ««fefeJogy while U ie making it hi* ««t fe aye-rtew of tfe chief of tfe Gestapo. Another afssfi.’es.isss • t * °*m“ ” f e Howard feelude* Wary Marrte, the acclaim fe “Primm Without Bars” and dun, |t0|* * Day* j Roy Rogers ROMANCE on THE RANGE*** “FOUR JACKS AND A JILL** “KINGS Row’* Pitta “SHE’S IN THE ARMY Sun. Mon. Tuee. Iiool REASONS 'Wh/y^SIwiitd A t t e n d THEATRES ■ * IC mmiMkm Irmm.im f v c *ri/ W m n M m m m x w Mrs. Eli e i Dwrfes! Sewer and Of Denison, hofe, of Go night Monday X. McNeill, * Bella Center, the week-end Mrs. » tfe initiation Rpringfield Dr. and Mi o f Mrs. Row Kimble, Su his-degree at sity, June L as First Lieu; Miss Jean- day night a ents, Mr. and Spahr is. cm Christ Hospii Mr. and Mj for their guej .Garrard o f Walker and c| o f Shaker H Mr*.;C. E. Si RogerB o f Xei ■' Rural Rop: authorized -to! bonds and s application 1 Dr.W .R. ' ill the. past improved, an be about in s Rev. -Paul'l Coultervfile, latter’s mottl and other tell “ According -era have colli old rubber h scrap rabbet . paign closes amount repor, expectations. I : Dr. and Children, Ms Granville, O.J Friday e^ehil tnerly pastoj] dongregatior Judith- An* and Mrs. Cal are spendinl grandmother] Mr. Roy polynd In tl ment, Patter| f erred to a Master Cl been spendiij relatives in NO ROC London elq discontinue harvest eea| agers in tii -.only store regular*cast NO DI Reports the DemocS election' hojf none ehtere offices. Fri. *4 Erroll “ iHEY First fhot Gads We HsurXleTSI D - S T h r ift D *y* REEN— o o n t id e ” Gabia and a Lupino cl see a- •raffW?' SWa“ ®® k e y A ft [ged The Iride” Starring IRENE DUNNE MELVIN DOUGLAS Tfe June1: 1 V i n k * / " “MOON- . TIDE” Starring ! IDA LUPjLNO JEAN GABIN i 3si June: LESLIE V4 d ! IOWAHD ln ■ "yjfi ^M ister plus “ M e e t T h e i Stwarls’ ’ \l* a Roy Roger) ROMANCE O THE RANGE’* I“FOURJACKS i AND A JILL” [“KINGS Row” Plug * l [HE’S IN THE ARMY 1100 I
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