The Cedarville Herald, Volume 65, Numbers 27-52

tsBVMWiua i n u u , n m u r , w m m u . t m T Wt% C R P A R V I L L B H B 1 H P yA-pTJr ^ w - MWMHmt Hiithutiil 4WCN!. - — EDITOR AND PUBL j 0hta Kw***»tHiC Jam-} *B**l V*#W riW* **#**•- Ikntertci at the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October SI, 1387, as second class rosttoy, FRIDAY, OCTOBER W , 1942 ' ^ ^ b r ic k e r ’ s r e - e l e c t io n GUARANTEES 1, That Ohio Will Do Her Part to Win the War. & That Ohio Will Head in Civilian Defense, 3. That Ohio Will Have Gotd Government. 4. That Ohio Will Ta.ke Care of Its Needy. 5. That Ohio Will iTotec; the Farmer, the Workman and the Employer. _ 7. That Ohio Will Meet Post-war Problems, Including- Jobs forReturning War Veterans. Mj)ii)i.,iiwiii»,ii!jijmiwti.ni.nmiiinininiiwwiwM»iiiwniiiiim WHAT A NEW DEAL VOTE WILL BRING YOU That a spreading of the war to other nations will follow the trip of Windy Wendell WiUkiej* advance agent for the- New Deal in extending the war. That your sons of fifteen and sixteen today will in the near future become military policemen to be stationed in far off lands without even opportunity of a future in any profes­ sion, the arts, the farm or the factorty. ; That you Will walk for months to come while Now Deal and Wall Streeters battle as to who is to control the synthetic rubber for auto- tires to be madb in,factories that are not yet planned, let alone constructed. . . - , That the American farmer faces a heavy hand of the law to plant only government directed crops and to receive only such pay as the government decrees—-just as is done in Russia. That beer and hard liquor will he available to keep a na­ tion drunk while coffee and sugar ate to he rationed as they are. in Russia today and before the war, That you will be'forded to hear, the heaviest'taxes ever . levied on a civilized people to help pay for the New Deal folly of waste and extravagance. „ - That plans are now being formulated to levy a special tax amounting to hundreds of millions to feed the unemployed at the end of the war. • That farm labor will he under a labor organizer as head of the social security administration with farmers forced to pay a tax directly into that fund as industry does today. That schools and churches of all denominations will-fall under the control of the federal government just as done in Russia today. Already the first step has been taken with the New Deal ordering the public schools to take on one branch of military instruction. That farm crops will never be available for the manufac­ ture of synthetic rubber-thus limiting the farm market and in­ come of those who toil on the farms, ’ , All of this and much more awaits only the opportunity of the Communistic control with another New Deal Congress. ' You are soon to be forced, to walk due to the bungling, of the New Deal in behalf of English and Dutch bankers that con- . trol the world rubber market. d em o c r a t ic s l a v e r y g e t s a jo l t While the So-called Democratic New Deal fighting a war .for so-called .democracy received a severe jolt this week when Gongress voted to lift the Democratic poll tax that had hin- *, dered both negroes and uneducated Southern white from cast­ ing'a vote. The vote on this issue was decissive even in the face of organized Southern Democrats. It is the one issue the White House has had little interest in,, at least not enough to 'take, it'before the nation in a fireside chat. With Southern > Democracy and Eastern New Deajism, the negro is just / a / ‘nigger'*, the same as he was. before the Civil War. It was -slavery then and the South has never fully accorded full citi­ zenship, With Republican votes and leadership the bill to give the Northern negro's brothers the-right of suffrage was passed without a hint of direction from the White House, Across the Atlantic England fights to keep India under con­ trol to be able to collect burdensome taxes from a helpless people. India demands independence and her right to en­ joy ‘‘democracy”, what the, world is fighting for, hut England . refuses to even make one more promise after other promises have been repeatedly broken. The negro to Southern democracy is just the same culprit he was befpre the Civil War. He has never gained a civil op­ portunity of full citizenship except through Republican votes. The negro that does not recognize this stands in the way iff ”• future opportunity of his own color. Wfibur Glenn VoJIvs is dead a t the age of 72 and did not live until 1978 aa he had predicted back in 1931. Being the self-styled prophet of Zion, [11., headquarters pf the Bowie cult and successor of the Rev. John Alex­ ander Dowin, Vollva ru led 'the re­ ligious city -without liquor, tobacco, pork and oysters but with an iron flat, A number from this community took up the Dowie theory and several fam- liei, including a former superintend­ ent of schools, John Henry Sayers, 1ocated 'in that city. Voliya a t one time attended Antioch College, Scrapping fo r scrap has develop^ new kind of scrap^with some hot words. Down in Goergik the Daugh tera of Confederacy are* up in arms over scrapping a Civil War gun used by the Confederates.. Even the his­ toric iron fence is the subject of de­ bate in the. south as well- as in the north. We wonder i f New Orleans hap scrapped the many hundred Spanish second story iron grill porch­ es that are the marvel of the age, the finest example of handcraft we have ever seen. In Springfield the iron fence is the: bone’ of contention. We counted twenty-nine ron fences a- round property on E. High st., Tues­ day morning from Spring to East Sts. -In Yellow Springs iron fences have been pulled out without asking permission of owners. In Xenia the suggestion of scrapping an old fire engine owned by the Legion brought debate. Then came retaliation. How about the iron fences, iron Tailings to modern government mortgaged dwellings and iron grills a t doors of modern Homes? Since the latter, en­ tered the discussion the old fire en­ gine seems secure and so are the fences. mars must face the facta—they alone have baea played as suckers. If far­ mer* will hold back light weight ani­ mals and sell in -limited quantities a t intervals, they can upset any of the Henderson Communistic plans -on con­ trol of farm prices. C O L L E G E N E W S {Gontinuod from, first i ?ag$) looked the best. He was a pitcher at Rosewood High [School, but has play­ ed other positions with various teams, Don Compton comes from' Spring Valley as a combination ouStfielder and first baseman. Ttyy Hurley also comes from. Spring Viflley. ,He was a second baseman there but caught a t Kingman High School before that. Bud frvina is right a t home a t second base in more ways than one. He Jives in Cedarville and played second for the local high school a few years ago. Carl Watkins,’Xenip, graduated from Cedarvjlle High School and is rangy enough' to make a good first baseman. The five sephmores, Andersen, Lewis, French, Babb and Wright all saw action in the abbreviated season last year, and Brill is the seniu>* who is back after a years absence. When he was a junior he was the regular first baseman, «- > . OVERTHETOP FORVICTORY —**S-' WltH - MHOSTATESWM BOjIDS-STANPS Now’ the ladies are' asked to- give up their rayon and silk petti- coates and such other undies that are .made of these materials. Has the. White House bureau drawers been searched for the much needed mate­ rial for the war effort? Senators front the cotton states object to plac­ ing rayon in the hands of the du-, Pounts, one of which married into th ^ Roosevelt family. Sen. Cotton Ed. Smith, Dem., S. C., raised 'a storm but it looks like there may yet he a cotton market. Look a t the yardage necessary for the ruffles on- cotton skirts and panties, like the grandmas of yesteryears wore. You may get your choice of "stockingless legs” or cotton stockings. There will be no- other alternative under New Deal decree. YOUR INCOME AND YOUR INCOME TAX <■.■ , ■ 1‘- ■ ■.-y• ■. ■ ■ With the new income tax law thousands of new taxpayers will be added to the government list. -Higher rates and lower, exemption means more persons will have a greater share in the government than in former years. One new tax is a five per’ cent victory of deduction tax taken from’ feach payroll at the source. Another plan yet to come up after the election Wii) be the eight per cent spending or sales tax. Another plan to hit the farmer is the transaction tax now under consideration in the committee. This if passed will take 5 per cent from each sale of live stock that goes to market. Jf the New Deal follows demands farmers are in for a special tax to offset their living before income taxes are paid. This is now demanded in all fairness to city folks who are compelled to get their living after their income taxes are paid. To many the rates will take 70 per cent of income and you can find figures in another column On this page as to how much each single person must pay who makes, $600 a year. If you do not insist 6h eliminating useless spending by the NewBea your own modest tax will be doubled within the next year, The cost of the war is enormous but it is nothing in comparison to the thousands drawing federal pay for doing nothing but pub­ licising the New Deal. You cannot expect less spending when the New Deal can maintain a hold no other way. The result in the end is bankruptcy for the nation, A Republican congress is all that can save the nation from bankruptcy and a heavier tax burden. You are asked to give your son even before he can secure a high school diploma. And you are going to be asked for much more if you do not register a protest. The daily prebs has vented itself to a wide extent over the secret trip Roosevelt took inspecting munition plants from the seat of an automobile. The daily boys think they were play­ ed as "suckers” and they were and a- gain will be willing victims as long as they continue to peddle the White House yarns about the farmers as the guilty persons that would plunge the nation into inflation. We have as yet read ho comment by any daily paper that has given the true situation. If the press had stated it \iras unlawful for any newspaper to publish the acts, and wherc-abouts of the Commander- in-Chief during .war time with out. his own. announcement first, the public would have known ^why nothing was said. GETONE OFTHESE BARGAINSNOW! 983 LOANS UNCALLED FORI DIAMOND*—-LADIES' AND MEN up WHIST AND HOCKET WATCHE8 ........................,.:$6.76up ALL WOOL SUITS up TOP COATS—OVERCOATS , , * 4 . 4 * up GUITARS—TRUMpKf«—0LABfN3T8^CAM£RAS ■ - KODAKS—PIELD CLASSES—BINOCULARS . „ ' RADIOS—SHOT GUNS—RIFLES NEW. AND USED LADIES' FUR COATS. US* OUR LAY-A*WAY PLAN. . r LOAN O F F IC E , 6 ^ , W* MA IN JE iiP SpTingfisld* Opett Evaning* Everyone is going to be interest­ ed in the income tax payments next March with several new taxes to hit the salary check or profit account of individuals, firms and farmers. We have taken a few samples of what it will cost under the new income tax law passed last week. The minimum exemption for single persons $600 and the income tax on this amount is $5.20. If you earn $1,000 and are sin­ gle the tax is $84.70 If you earn $2,- 000 Mid single the tax is $287.80. A single man working a t Patterson Field and drawing the usual $37.50 a Week f6r common labor, will be asked to pay an income tax on $1950 which will amount to $267.49. A married person with no dependents will pay a tax of $144.48 on a salary of $2,000, A married' person with two depend­ ents and $2,000 income will pay $38.- 58, On an income of $1,000,000 the income tax! for a single person is $809,995.00, which should he proof that two “can live cheaper than one.” Long will the New Deal be remember­ ed for debt, taxes and death, HERALD WANT AND SALE ADS PAY Saturday, thejtoosevelt administra­ tion, bearing scars from the Con­ gressional fight over farm price fix­ ing, set out trial baloons to get senti­ ment on lower hog prices. The press Wfs given a story that .Henderson was ;o reduce hog prides , the following Monday from $1 to $2 a hundred. On the radio Saturday night the $2 per lUhdred' reduction was announced, tfonday arrived and buyers did not bid, hogs dropping 70c. Tuesday an­ other drop of 28c. The same day Hen- terson increased the retail price of lard three cents a pound and this hit the consumer. With Roosevelt deter­ mined to cut farm prices, regardlesft of the Rapt. IK stabilized price, the last law has been flaunted and far- 0km emmi w t t k i k e d te u k le -d e n a e tm k rte <32* Ton get twice as much for your money in an Alpagora, for the simple reason that this coal is unusually soft and luxurious to the touch . — and yet — unusually rugged and long-weiringl For on the face of every square inch of Alpagora fabric, you find twice the usual number of hair fibres. That’s what textile scientist* call a Double-Deme fabric . , . a fabric which feels a lot softer, and givesa lot more m ileage, to o l No wond e r t han , we can promise you double value! At Advtrtlml In *h* SatSve. Pott r>N • Tt V o g u e S h o p t , t t I* . f euefai* 4 * * SPRINGFIELD, 0 “ ownssi LEGAL NOTICE Clara Swagart, whose last pl*a* of address la unknown will take norice that Frederick Swagart on the 14th day of October, 1942 Died his petition against her on the grounds of wilful absence for more than three years. Said cause will be fa r bearing in the Common Flea* Court of Greene Coun­ ty, Ohio, from and after six week* from the first publication of this no­ tice, towit, October 16,1942, FREDERICK SWAGART^ (10-16-«t-ll-20) „ by Robert H. Weed, .* hi* attorney. LEGAL NOTICE To Ollie J. .Hartzell, husband of Carrie Jane Hartzell, whose place of residence is unknown, will take notice, that on October 9th, 1942, Carrie Jane Hartzell, his wife, filed a petition for divorce, in the Common Pleas Court of Greene County, being Case No. 22, 993, You are required to answer within six (6) weeks from the date of the first publication of this notice, which Is October 16th, 1942, or judg­ ment may be taken against you. CARRIE JANE HARTZELL, (lCf-16-6t-ll-20) By Smjth, McCallister & Gibney, , v Heir Attorneys- WANTBD— Wood Cutter* by g * cord. W alter Finney, 2 1*3 mlU* JL of Clifton. • p m Friday A m i Sirtrarday Twin TltriQ Day* -SCREEN— The Andrew* Sisters . IN “Give Out Sister*” A SUN.-MON..TUES.I BOGART 's*i*hit*actio* f*r tlsoci*Saw > imiw « wi ^ h „> w « wihhwi ; m ) iiiimiwii < iiiiimihw High Grade Jersey Cattle Located 3 miles northwest of Cedarville, 2% miles south­ west of Clifton,, just off Wilberforce and Clifton road; on Tobias Road, on Friday* Oct 16,1942 at 1:00 M. 22 Head ofJerseys No. 1—6 year old cOw, fresh Sept. 18, milking 4 gal. day No. 2—2 year old heifer, fresh Sept. ,26; milking 3 gal. day No. 5-7-3 year old heifer, fresh Sept; 22, milking 3 ^ gal. day No. 12—2 year old heifer, fresh Sept. 8, milking 3 gal. day No., 15—2 year old heifer, fresh Sept. 29,. milking 3 gal. day No. 3—2 year old heifer due to freshen Dec. 23 No.' 6—2 year old heifer^ due to freshen Dec. 12,. "No., 10—5 year old now, due to freshen by. sale day* - No. 13—2 year old heifer, due to freshen Dec. 14 No., 14—5 year old cow, due to. freshen Nov, 22, No. 17 — 4 year old cow, due to freshen Dec. 5 No. 21—7 year old cow, due to freshen Nov. 23 No.' 9—8 year old cow, fresh in May, milking 3»/£ gal., rebred No. 11—3 yr. old heifer, fresh in Feb., milking 2t/% gal.,, rebred No.'s 4-7-18-19-22 yearling bred heifers. No.’s 8-16-20 open heifers. These cattle all pure bred but not recorded. Milk record given on all cattle in milk and must be seen to be appreciated. All cattle bred to Sybil LuckyfDream Prince, Grand Champion bull of Greene and-Clinton County and Springfield Jersey Cat­ tle ClubShow. All T. B. and Bang Accredited No. 8025 C M U I & BUTTS, Omars Lunch served by ladies of U. P. Church Weikert and Gordon, Aucts. Public Sale! Located four miles east of Cedarville, three miles west of Selma on Route 42 on ' ' . ' Saturday, October 31,1942 > .*. 12:00 Noon. . 6 ------ HEAD OF HORSES------- 6 ) * ■ . Consisting of One black mare 5 years old,, wt, 1800 lb., good, broke, one sorrel mare, 7 years old, wt. 1600, good, broke; onO bay mare 12 year* old, wfc 1,500 lb., brown mare 12 years old, Wt. 1,400 lb., two sorrel co Its, 2 years old, White mane and tail.' * ; 3------- HEAD OF C 6W S ------ 3 Consisting of one red coW,4 yr. old, fresh in July, with heifer calf; one yellow cow, 3 yrs. old, fresh in May, giving four gal, milk. 60------ HEAD OF HOGS <— -6 0 Consisting o t seven sows and fifty pigs, eight tweek old. Two opeji sows, i s ------ 1 HEAD OF'SHEEF-------lft . . .Consisting of eight open Wool ewe and seven lambs. FARM IMPLEMENTS—-John Deere Model B, Tractor, on Steel with break­ ing plows and com cultivator. _ Also 8-ft. double disk, cultipacker, John Deere com planter with fertil- zer attachment and 80 rod Of wire, John Deere gang plow with five-horse hitch, Cassidy Horse Gang plow, two sulky plows, 8 walking breaking plows; MqCormlck-Decring wheat binder, Bennett two-row corn harvester, Hoos- ier 12-disc grain drill, manure spreader spring and spike took harrows, 2 tWo-row com plows, Kelley Duplex mill, single and double shovel plows, McCorniick-Deering one and one-half horse engine, hog oiler, complete butchering tools and kettles, 12 rod of four inqh drain tile, 8 sides of har­ ness, lines, collars, bridle. * l *■ - ■ ■ , 1 ' ‘ FEED—Five ton of Timothy hay, 2 ton of 2-year old bean hay, 250 shocks of com in field. 12 "ingle hog boxes, new floors and runners, 2 double hog boxes . HOUSEHOLD GOODS—iWalnut dining room suits, four poster bed, Wal­ nut W*ah stand, rocking chairs, davertport/CrOsley cabinet radio, extension table, 0x12 rug, wash stand, chest, china closet, dishes, coal and wood range and three burner coal oil stpve. TERMS OF SALE-—CASH WANTED OTAD imK® We pay for Here#* $Lt# > and Q t m U M Animals of rise mvd condition Telephone XENIA U R I er DAYTON KB -?m WUICHET PRODUCTS, INa Dayton, Ohio We also remove Hogs Calves — Sump 1HHIffi,inT1l,frM ll......lenniiaass—lumammilMMBMUirtWm A. A, Huffm an WANTED HICKORY LOGS MUST BE GREEN TIMBER L. R. JACOBS Phone 2734, Yellow Spring*, O. WEIKERT and GORDON, Aucts. “ p e e p e r * ^ j o u r n e y S ta rrin g E r r o l f l y n t t Don**** , " K e a g a u ThinW? Oct. t*. ? Wfcj •Thura. Oct. 1* I Days “ B etw een Us Girls” 1 Diana Barrymora Robert Cummings (Coming Sunday). “MY SISTER EILEEN** RaV Oct 17> 4 Days Joa E. Brown IN - , “ D A R IN G YOUNG MAN” ■ P lu s ' “ Sin Town” Con»tanco Bennett Sun. For -4 Day* ROY ROGERS In- ■.■ ‘•UNSET SERENADE" also “CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION!? Sun. Mori. Georoe \Tuee. MONTGOMERY ‘ORCHE8TRA WIVES* ■ ■ . plus “ BROADWAY big S hot ** 900 h B lC REASONS ~Whij youShoufd A t t e n d f h e s t THEATRES E v e / u j WEDNESDAY Mefi are dying for the Four Freedom*. The least we can do here at heme 1* to buy War B o n d * f o r War Bond*, every pay day^ r x W# pay for HORSES $4.00 COWS $2.00 of* size and c6ndltio» Hogs, Shoep^r Calve*, etc Removed promptly call XENIA F E R T IL IS E R PHOHE MA. IS ! Referee Chi K. 6 , Buphrieh, Xenia, Oh

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=