The Cedarville Herald, Volume 65, Numbers 27-52

* cuusviujt mum , rotv n, iiu r ii P « * THE CEDARV I LLE HERA LD ■n*~ &ARLH BULL — —*,------- EDITOR AND PUBLISHER , hemui mm ow* Mmnmmrnmi w«4 v*a»y vtmmm. Entered at the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 81,1887* m second class matter. FRIDAY, JULY -81, lft42 THE NEED FOR SCRAP IS GREAT With European conditions as uncertain as they appear to­ day and the uncertainty o f the outcome o f the war in that sec­ tor, it is certain this country must have all the available old and unused scrap metai fo r war purposes. The rubber cam­ paign proved this country has much waste material and it must be put to good use. I f we are to have civilian goods we must rush the old metal where it can be put to use. That this old metal will not come to the surface all admit unless we get busy and bring it out. It is impossible to get out sufficient ore from mines to keep the steel mills at full speed. The new metal mixed with the old gives quality fo r the pur­ pose intended. It is not expected that many will find a ton 'of old metal on farms but a few' pounds here and there means tons at the mills. Read the appeal fo r junk on another page o f this issue. HAS POLITICS BEEN ADJOURNED FOR “OUR” WAR? I f there is anyone who can prove to a blind map that poli­ tics has been “ adjourned” as requested by Roosevelt, we want to meet that gentleman. With the head o f the New Deal leaving the war fo r its own fate while he dictates to the Democrats o f New York state who shall be nominated fo r governor we won­ der what the public thinks. Then we have the purge elections. This week we see the New Deal leaving the war to fight a Dem- cratic Senator in Texas, who did not always take orders from the White House, The primary result is Sen. O’Daniel receiv­ ed 48 per cent o f the popular vote, with the rest divided be­ tween other candidates; THE FARM BLOC PUTS IT OVER As expected, the all-powerful farm b loc in Congress has put over its rubber program. It has got through/ with a thump­ ing majority, its bill to set up an independent -agency to pro­ duce synthetic rubber from 'farm products alcohol, The meas­ ure went through against the'vigorous opposition o f WPB and the War Department. It is known to have the dis-approval of the President, and may be vetoed. Nevertheless, its sponsors confidently expect that the bill can be passed over a veto. Such is the power o f the farm bloc even in the midst o f the greatest war crisis the nation has ever faced. This measure'is a fine example o f how to make a bad situ­ ation worse! I t is no secret that the country is disappointed in the synthetic rubber program. One reason fo r the delay in get­ ting into mass production is the failure of the Rubber Reserve Corporation to realize early enough the value o f alcohol as a rubber base. Donald Nelson, a thoroughly honest man, has ad­ mitted that i f the job could be planned over again from the start, alcohol would play a larger role in the program. The farm bloc, therefore had a grievance. But it had no right to set up an independent agency with authority to make contracts, acquire critical materials, build plants and in every other possible way promote the making o f rubber from farm products. There is no limit in this bill on the amount .of syn­ thetic to be made, no restriction o f the product to war needs or even essential civilian requirements. The ,sky—-or rather the grain surplus— is the only limit.- j It this bill becomes law Congress might just as well abolish WPB. What is the point o f setting up an agency to allocate raw materials fo r the production o f war goods and then setting up a rival agency to override the plans o f the first? I f any minority group in America has a right to unlimited use o f critical mater­ ials that should go first into the making o f planes, tanks and guns, it is time the country knew about it. — Cincinnati Times-Star SECRETARY HULL AND THE NEGRO VOTER Secretary o f State Hull went on the air some evenings ago ■ •to inform the world o f the New Deal plans to socialize-, every nation now and after the war. In other words he proposes to do a lot o f missionary work for New Deal ideals regardless o f the war. Carrying on two fights at the same time is quite a task as we see it, especially when victory, o f the first effort is not yet in sight. While, Hull Would save the world for democ­ racy we wonder what all the disturbance down in Arkansas at the primaries means to society? The negro has been denied his right to a counted, primary vote while he stands in line try­ ing to explain a certain section o f the state constitution. No one but a Democrat could expect to win in that state so why should **Mr, Hi|Jl want to convert the world when it is his duty under the constitution to defend our own citizens and see that voting rights under what the New Deal calls dempcracy are given to southern negros. England has such a fight on her hands in In­ dia while “ fighting fo r democracy” . STATEMENTS TO THE CONTRARY NOTWITHSTANDING The G. McCorkell & Son Insurance Agency has-not changed ownership Nor it’s policy o f serving it’s Customers have been examined and licensed to sell— FIRE — CASUALTY------SURETY Insurance fo r the period that Pierre McCorkell is gerving with the armed forces. Your continued good will and business earnestly solicited . NELSON CRESWELL Notary Public Masonic Building Free Trade, imported manufactured goods made in foreign countries by cheap labor is going to. give this pa- tiofivthe longest line o f unemployed the country has ever known. With in­ dustry in this country geared up to mass production with labor at a scale where the average citizen now cannot afford to purchase, a dark and gloomy picture faces the nation. With our economic policy now in the hands of school-boy spendthrifts and little re­ sponsibility, there is no telling what comes next. Vice President Wallace is no longer a favorite in the Latin countries. Pn his trip months ago he made glowing promises that have not been kept.. He-was going to turn all South America into a vegetable gar­ den to feed our troops away from home and at the same time giv­ ing our own people the gospel o f more food at home for the army and the conquered nations. He promised all kinds o f machinery to work crops in competition with our own farmers and the great surplus we hear about. The war made manufacture o f ma ■ehinery impossible. The political Latin leaders saw great riches in the picture and were urged to prepare mil lions o f acres o f land for cultivation. The S. Americana did their part but the Wallace machinery never arrived. It was a broken picture and some bad feeling has grown from the Wallace proposal. 1 - . . „ ferment prominence the interested .parties, the present Urns refuse to sell $50 fo r a. Ford or Chevrolet sized auto . o f u beef without the ,, fore-quarter, casing made o f synthetic rubber and „ — — - One packer says whereever there is Spot good fo r more than 10,000 miles We Hod a Cincinnatian, a Democrat a vast o f government spending lixe a - in hot weather, the farm program o f by the way, tell pa a few days age he round Dayton, Cincinnati! Akron and the .Communists Will come home to was off the New Deal because he had j Cleveland no one wants forequarter 'the fellow that has “ worked, harder a son to answer his country’s call by \ and pork chops have to be trimmed and longer" to make a lot o f Wall the draft route and did noj; ask for until no fat shows. This is inflation. (Street bankers and New Dealers rich It can be called nothing else. We see at the expense o f the fanner and the no connection then with farm prices city auto owner, and the so called threat o f inflation.1 «in-...f” deferment.' He said he opposed and was going to do all he could to de­ feat Wm.,Hessler political writer and radio commentator who has been urging the war fo r pmnths ®nd yet is able bodied and o f an age he can vol­ unteer any day. but has never offered his country his service. This Cincin­ natian named a number o f prominent Democratic family boys that have es­ caped the draft so far due to pull and he as well as thousands o f Cincinnati Democratic voters would register a protest at the Democratic primary and again at the November election in November if Hessler is nominated, The New York Times in an editor­ ial says a lot o f boards in Washing­ ton are considering with Secretary >f State Hull what to do with all our factory machinery, for farm, indus­ trial and home products now that this equipment is not in use. It is propos­ ed to ship this machinery to South America and train its people to make .heir own supplies now and in the fu­ ture. The Refinance Corporation is to handle the project. Under the .Hull; Roosevelt free trade lend-lease this nation is to be taxed (income) to es­ tablished neighbor countries in busi­ ness that will eventually become our own competitors at home and abroad. Meantime American labor will become hungry and someone will be compelled ander our |Communistic brand o f gov­ ernment to feed the unemployed. ,The present war is economic and started between Germany and England and was a fight over who - would control Robert Secrest, Dem. who has ser­ ved in congress for several terms from the Fifteenth Dist. was one who consistently voted against immediate entrance into the war, ’He has been blasted by New Dealers and even fac­ ial a purge, but he refused to give in. To show up some o f his New Deal newspaper critics who take orders from Washington in exchange for fav­ ors, Bob volunteered and has been ac­ cepted in the armed service. Demo­ crats might take that example home to themselves and ask about the four famous sons who had high honors conferred on them ^rithout even an over-night hour o f experience. Few there are today that know where they are or what they do. .N ot long ago a news story from London tells of one son being with, a photographic group in that country. It waa not even inti­ mated he was carrying a guii. More volunteers from. Democratic ranks would do much to prove to the nation that*we do not have the “ indifference to the war" that is now charged up to mid-western citizens. the business, in Latin'America. Eng­ land was not our friend four years a- go when' she grabbed much o f our South American business. Her wage scale then was one-third less than it was in this country. Germany came along and by the barter system took the business away frqm England; It is here ,the war was fomented^ It will be another industrial war what ever the outcome of World War Number 2. By. placing a quarantine against a few of our supposed high-minded dip­ lomats leaving our own shores and be here to win the present war might do more good than preaching world peace and a lot o f crack-pot ideas that aVe untried or even -thought out. Farmers should be interested in the report on the cost o f living increase and the cost of wages for organized labor as put out by the northwestern National Life Insurance Co. The plea that higher pay to farmers - for grain and meat products means infla­ tion in view o f labor increases is but a blind and the New Deal is using the AAA as a stuge dr to do pimping for union labor organizers. These are the arguments used by union labor to line up men behind the movement to lower all farm prices. It is more than that. It is a method Of making good a New Deal campaign promise to organized labor that the cost o f living would not be increased if we got into war. Here is something worth considera­ tion if you are a follower o f the. New .Deal. It should appeal to every pa­ rent that has n boy or girl of school age that is musically inclined or un­ dergoing training in a school orchestra or band. There is a symphony orches­ tra in Interlochen, Mich composed o f ISO boys and girls .You no doubt have heard the ail-Ohio band at the Ohio State Fair. Boys and girls in uniform looking and playing their best to the plaudits of thousands o f fair patrons. Suppose the head o f the musician’s union should serve notice on the fair management that the Ohio boys and girls could not play at the Ohio State or any other fair. If so no other band would be permitted to play for the fair. The experience o f the Michigan band of boys and girls was that it could not play over the radio without approval o f the union boss. The own­ er o f the station wa3 helpless. He did not have friend in Washington where a union boss can dictate to army and j navy, even to the White House. Now Deal followers (night ponder over the situation. Farmers might take a hint as to what they face. Santa Claus is not the fellow you think he is down at the Capitol. There is another charac­ ter behind the red and white uniform I and the public will no longer tolerate j such treatment of her boys and girls. CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY The Northwestern report shows that the cost of living has gone up but 13 per cent above 1039 levels/while or­ ganized labor has enjoyed an in­ crease o f 34 per cent With ceiling prices on every thing the farmer must purchase based on highest priced la­ bor and ceiling prices on reduced or oven average prices fo r grain or live­ stock places the farmer at a disad­ vantage and the goat in the present Communistic scheme to make good the Roosevelt promise o f the farmer “ working harder and longer h6urs” for less thafi everyone else is receiv­ ing. The fooler is the fake parity price screen that members o f the AAA must preach to hold their salaried jobs. You do not hear the New Deal re- fering to the fact the public has so much money it will not eat common cuts o f beef or pork. Scarcity o f beef is only a cry. We are told on reliable information there 1 b plenty o f fore­ quarter of beef everywhere but no buyers as everyone wants only the best cuts and the price is no consider- eration. We are told that packers at tmiMfMMiiiimiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiMiitiiiiiiifmiinimmHiHiiMtf Commissioner! 1Eyes Examined, Republican^ Primary Election! AUG . 11, 1942 --Polltlm l Advertisement After weeks of bickering Ralph In- ?ersol, editor o f PM, a New York pa­ per owned by the multimillionaire |jar8h0 "Field, New .York and Lon­ don) hjfe been-shamed- jntb Volunteer­ ing1' for* anhy service- rather thafi fol- 'ow his boss in demanding deferment. The case was before the appeal board it the time Ingersol volunteered. As ?M was one of the original “ jump in­ to the war” newspapers o f the tabloid type) it was unusual the owner would .Isk deferrment for one when he urged immediate induction for all others o f the same age. The PM has been New Deal but n one dared grant the de* Glasses Fitted, Reasonable Charges. Dr.C .E.W ilkia Optometric Eye Specialist i Xenii, Ohio . j J With prospects o f restricted prices on beef and poTk,*and a present drop on pork due to lease-lend buying at lower prices from the' big packers;/ threatened veto by Roosevelt o f the plan to use wheat fo r synthetic rub­ ber and thus have an established mar­ ket at home, the future for the farm is not what some o f the teat-suckers at the federal treasury would have you believe it is. When the farmer is faced with the estimated price o f Hwi are dying the V w t Freedoms. THo least aw «*» do herb at heme t» Wat Bonds—1#% Bonds, every pay day I to buy * War W A N T E D DEAD STOCK We pay fo r Horses $*,00 and Cows $4.0# * Animals o f size and, wndltkn Telophase XENIA 1272& or DAYTON KE-79S1 WUrCHET PRODUCTS, INC. Dayton, Ohio Wo also remove Hogs Calves — $beep' UNITEDSTATES WAR 5SSK H | H A lot o f smoke and much stink has 'been raised by New Dealers about the patriotism o f those who opposed en­ trance into the war before the Pearl Harbor attack. The reason given by most every opponent then was the nation was unprepared. Certainly, there has;been plenty o f proof of that with more than 400 sinkings of craft on the Western Atlantic, most all be­ ing loaded with raw material or finish­ ed war products. This loss to this na­ tion amounts to hundreds of millions and must and will be paid for by eve­ ry citizen, an income tax payer or not. ONLY TWICE-A-YEAR! » VERICOOLS TROPICAL MESHES Make Your Choice Now Fin* Shirts wf Known Quality,- Famous Brands, Broken Lots and Sizes— But most all Sizes are rep­ resented. This Is the Tim* to Restock — For Such Values W ill Not Be Seen Again for a Long Time— Formerly up to $3.50. 3 for $5.75 2000 $1 TIES NOW 67c, 2 for $1.25 Open Monday Night Until 8:45 P.M. ‘ ' o g l e S h c p IW SO. KXMTAMAY* * D O Y O U R PART — BUY BONDS N O W ★ SPRINGFIELD, OHIO S A L E j Starts Thursday# Ju ly 30 th j EVERYTHING IN THE STORE R E D U C E D . OR MORE (Except A Few Contract Items) LIVING ROOM and BED ROOM SUITES PRICED AS LOW AS $ 5 9 oo MANY OTHER ITEMS EQUALLY LOW PRICED NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY THE FURNITURE YOU NEED CAPPEL’S 124 E. High St., SPRINGFIELD, OEj.0 c . ^Friday And . Saturday Twin Thrill Days — SCREEN—* “ PACIFIC RENDEZVOUS” with Lea Bowman, Jean Roger* SUN.-M 0 N.-TUES.! F u rn itu re i /A- ROMANTIC RIOT! News and Cartoon TYRONE POWER — IN— “ THIS ABOVE ALL” W ith JOAN FONTAINE Thura. July 30 I 1 Wk Thura. July 30 3 Daya “ Sny JACKIE C O O PE R — IN— „ /c o p a t io n ” pre SE w,th “ t Z a f . . Letter Varling” ROBERT STACK —IN— Aug. 1 4 'Days. “ Men of Texas” — PLUS— “ Almost Married” j£AIRfiANKf Roy Rogers — IN— “ SONS OF ,THE PIONEERS” Also “ ALMOST MARRIED” Red 8un, Mow. Tue*. Skelton in “ SHIP AHOY” . Also . "SECRET AGENT OF JAPAN” 650 i Loime * t Brie, Pa., week-end for The Researi nual picnic I Shawnee Pari . . — -r~. ■P Mrs. Anna 1 is the guest c McCallister th Rev. W. R.G o f LaFayette } week with rela Mrs. Stanley returned home days here with Mr. and Mrs. daughter, Lynn Mr. and Mrs Milford, O., spt W ith relatives. . wno had been weeks returned Mr. and Mrs. spending two v Michigan. •Mrs. Hqgli 1 Doris Frances : several days las derson, Ind. Clyde. Walket ing at Carlisle, • military service His wife, forme make her home Mr. and Mrs. E tinue teaching A soft ball gar for this Friday tween the Cede team from M the school diam Pvt. Paul E Springfield ha Forrest, Tenn., is making her parents, Dr. an Miss Gladys relatives in Sot weeks. ^Miss Martha attending sunn University, is b opening o f the don lias been e Xenia High Sel JjJrs. Harriet from New Yor she has been v ke’s, and other has planned t Chltago to visb then go to Hai has been spend will return to City, Mo., the Jennings is r Jamieson. C ( . TI Miss Ethel has been the g PauHSdwards The rainstor United Presby nual picnic to dining room i <EZV h Mrs. Jtichan Gifford, Pikevi week with Mr. well. '• ’ Farmers hav« over the showi much needed fi com will probi season. For Rent—F 6—1984, Cedar m Mr. and Mrs., their guests Su Willard Barlow Columbus, and ■ Columbus. 1Texi US— TlOSt rie tl” S OF T PIONEI ,!so • MARR IOY” AGENT •F JAP. Fri. And Sa .Bruce Cabot * Wild Bill H News— “ P Sun. and M< Lawrence Oli «THE A1*N> Em- Tuesdi JAN* “YOUNC Selected Wed. and Joe K. Bro- *' SHUT M Comedy— SwriiwiiMiiwmowomu 50 J

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