The Cedarville Herald, Volume 66, Numbers 1-26
H f f lK .w a B t a . r a i Y WPP LE H E R A L D . y A lHrtfejBB. ibs ?^ , EDITOR AND PUBLISHER ouu mnaystw awe#,* Ki**i y*M#?f fww a *»«. Jfojfc^ud *t the Post Office, CedartfUe, Ohio, ^ ^ OeWbw 81 ,1857, as »<^QRd c I rw matter. H|i>|IDmwl»MHW»PI>M.WUII*»»H>*Wl>«*IH)HIHI»«Mi l I t > A Y , MARCH m 1948 PAY-AS-YOU-GO-TAXES It'will save thila* SDectasils of *© 4 g*" W’V go tax the utmost effort from all of the people .to ' imir' inflation and collapse. Tile .J n total i l i l , wrangling oyer adoption of a pay-as-you- adda no strength to that effort. A plan .. inevitably be. put in force for the simple e only way that the government will be of sujjh^natnse sWetti collect the heavy taxes now being, levied, and to be increased in the future. To put it bluntly,, we have a choice between a pay-as-you-go or chaos. Huge assessemente against earning., already spent will result in a mass of tax delinquents which could aasilythreaten the stability of government itself. ' . A policy o f too little and too late with regard to taxm e f- ures would be just As fatal as a lacl^ of battle equipment on t. ■war front. Ho ordinary mortal can conceive o f such a su- But it is clear that with’ every passing day the, problems of financing the war grow greater. While the experts wran gle over small leaks in the Ruml filan, the debt flood rises. A pay-as-you-go tax should be passed without delay. Taxation must be put on a pay-a^you-earn. basis levied^agamst current income* Until that is done, the full effort of all the people,cannot be drawn upon to pay for the war, for many will'neyer pay ^otherwise A GREAT FINANCIER PASSES ON J. P,. Morgan, the elder, died thirty years ago .. Proud as most all parents are he left a. worthy instituton that was known around the world. The younger J. P. Morgan assumed the mantle of his father .and carried on with distinction and lag Inula*** No <*w for a mtouto would dairy a sitfjfi* iwldtor «>££*«, beans or meat for «n« m**l, The facta are thft English sad Russians probably h*,w more than our soldier* and our civilians. A friend of our* has just returned from New Orleans where he visited relatives. He vis- f H f l l l W AIDINGFARMFRONT :: SCHOOL NEWS E. A Drake, Co. Agricultural Agent Victory GardenSchool The first of a series of leader train- Xenla is atill fighting the new Ohtouted the greatest coffee market in the I (ng school in connection with the . « >4 .. . it . a. a_ _ h r .u » T I am I auji Ivcrnw l/I 1 m t k e b a t h f d a w i-V ivw eeM /la I ____. „ i __ t r * _ a _ n .....i ____ _____. _______ ___ail legal time, that is a few New Dealers hat need the issue to keep the Roose velt dynasty to the front row, The farmer is pictured a goat, Xenia evidently doe* not care for the trade of thd farmers who are 10p per cent for slow time. One merchant says the harping about the slow time on the part of certain Democrats does not represent even ji small per cent of Xenia business .interests. This merchant say* the city commission was mislead in the first vote andback tracked when they found sentiment time both in and of the city. world in that city. Saw thousands I county Victory Garden program .will Senior Class Hay Chase* | Seniors are working hard on the comedy “Sulphur and Molasses" to he given Thursday evening, April 1, at SHE at the .Opera House. upon thousands of sacks piled high On the river, wharfs. Storage for coffee in that city is a problem. In Washington they tell you coffee is scarce. Do you hslieye it? More pay for no Work is the Me Nutt plan to cure the absenteeism in War plants, He would give weekly vacations with pay at the expense of the income taxpayers. Of course this wbuld not be inflation, Paying the farmer, for Jiia labor will ruin our “economics" as FDR says. - <* success. ■ The great banking house did most of the financing of the Pirst World War so’ far as foreign relations were' required. The younger Morgan now has passed and an individual that, proved a tower of strength through business boons as well as panics, lays down his life as a setting sun. ■ . It can be said with great credit that the House of Morgan did an honest job at banking and investment. It made money, for its associates and it financed thousands of institutions of all kinds that 1 proved sucessful. The younger Morgan like J his father could see mo^e in the future than most bankers, Few if ever lost if they followed his advice and many times his advise .was always followed. ' ' Many that enjoy riches today.have reaped the 'profits from capital supplied by the House of Morgan. More than Y) .one who now clip coupons on their elder’s investments have traduced such financial leaders as Morgan as an enemy of society. The greatest tribute tht any parent can pay a son ’ it to leave a fortune, great or small, in the hands of his son to carry on that all investments be regarded as sacred trusts whether they belong to one or more individuals. One thing can be said, the elder "J. P." has an abiding faith and.confi dence of his son to carry on. He did not find it necessary to place the control of the House of Morgan inthe, hands of a ” trust company' as did a resident^of Hyde Park, who entailed his fortune for the lifetime of a spendthrift son. You would . hear more today if the grave could speak. Neither society or the nation has had reason to regret that the House of Morgah has had its place in the financial history o f the nation. To this the have-nots probably will not agree. Washington C./H. city commission has just voted fqr slow time after $ trial of Roosevelt time. Both bus iness interests and the farmers de manded the .slow time and the city commission adopted what the public wanted—not what Roosevelt wanted. The city commission in Cincinnati Monday heard arguments In favor of, ^low time, opt a speaker appeared for the fast time, which council adopted previously for six months o f the year, Hamilton- county^farmers have re fused to deliver milk to, trucks that schedule fast time. Market farmer* have taken the same position and this has caused eity. residents to give support to the farmers and dairy men. "It looks like the fellow that Upholds the Roosevelt time is on a jierch for public exposure and no one to help him to get his feet oo terra firms/ . OUR POSITION IN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS „ Things are getting into^an undisputed muddle over world politics and as usual the. NeW Deal has its nose in other people’s affairs. Russia is intimating demands for territory as her •part, of England’s war in “ carrying the flag o f democracy", something Stalin has fought in the’ past as much as Hitler am Mussolini are doing now. . Our own Ambassador, William H. Stanley, to Russia, let the cat out of the hag that all was not well in’Russia. Stalin had been insured by Wendell Willkie, he would have a secont front, but “ Windy" met an obstacle on his promise when’Eng land did not give approval. Churchill not having nodded for action on this side, left the United States in a position to the Russians that we had our heads in the European sand bed. Stalin is not fighting for democracy, something he has denied . his o,wn people, but Hitler, who crossed the border to conquer more people and mOre territory. Roosevelt and Churchill flew to North Africa to meddle in more European politics and so far they have accomplished nothing. Meantime,the cost of manpower in that nation evidently has become enormous to say nothing of material. While the European mess continues to boil, just as Geojgc* Washington and Thomas Jefferson had'warned the American people more than a hundred years ago, and we find our selves in the mixup while Hull, Hopkins,. Wallace, and Willkie all try to solve something beyond'their control because it is none of their business. The situation is so critical that Anthony Eden, British Foreign War Secretary, arrives unannounced by plane for a diagnosis by Dr. Roosevelt, whose powers with .the use of a magic wartd, is looked Upon as the marvel of the age. - Mean time the War continues and the “ top-hats" rush into public print and over the air about the “ peace*which so far is without understanding” . The only thing that is certain for the American farmer, the factory worker and the mechanic is “ free trade" in its rawest form. This means lower farm prices and lower wages to meet cheaper goods imported from for eign nations. This is what will be demanded by Roosevelt, Hull, Wallace, and Hopkins, The New Deal plan o f bribery among the foreign poli ticians, whq make'war a lifetime business, is to be taken as a joke. The Europeans will take bur free food while our children, go on ration. They will nod approval to many things to keep th,e food moving across the Atlantic but they are not going to adopt the New Deal idea o f socialistic democracy. Stalm has just as much as said the British are not even giving India, what they are supposed to be fighting for in this war* The American people had better wake up to what is going and where they are being led. We have conditions at home It lefcka like the New Deal faces John L. Lewis iti a new but powerful role in demanding a $2. a day in crease for hi* 350,000 miners. Or ganized labor neveiv-hecomes vexed when the’ leaders fight for-higher pay, The New Deal has cried- “in flation” if the “ Little Steel formula", a meaningless term, is not-recognized. Only favorite union, leaders get in creases. Lewis does not sit with the mighty hut *6 far. he has-been able to hold his own, The fact his union dipped, into union funds for a cool $500,000 to elect Roosevelt only brought the double cross in return, Lewis no longer takes Washington; 100 per cent on any promise. A lot of other people have learned to do the same. General McArthur has sent Lieut. Gen. Kenney, his air commander to Washington to demand 'more planes and equipment iif the contest with the Japs. MacArthur has been qonduc ting a one-man fight against big odds while England gobbles up everything in (sigt^p. • Gh^na has suffered be cause -the New Deal double-crossed these people by diverting goods to England after they had b,een con signed to China. All our American boys in the South Pacific carry their lives in their hands in combat with out ai? protection while we ship Eng land everything, even our free meat which that country sells to its own people at 24 cents a pound, about one half what the average American must pay for a pound of meat for his or her family, Ott far from settled with hunger stalking from every nook and corqer. eta Comiiig To The Xenia, Sunday The New Deal is in for more than cne panning at the hands of the Southern delegation. We hear some twenty members’ of congress have banded- themselves together to de feat every New Deal move that might be termed political, The force of the movement has defeated more than one proposal already this session, The Southerners will vote with the Republicans to set the White House back on its'foundation, be held in the Court House Assembly Room Friday evening March 19, at 3 P. M, Victor Hie# of the Horti cultural department o f Ohio State University will meet with the group. Each township and community or ganization are urged to select dele gates to attend in order that*they ■nay carry back, the information to their respective groups. A supply of bulletins and circulars on gardening ire being prepared and will he avail able at the county meeting. Fanners Oppose Ceiling On Live Animals Both the Greene County Farm Bu* cab.and the County Livestock com- nittee oppose the placing of ceiling prices -on-Jiye_animaIa unless every? abase of the meaFlhdustryv-iscluding vages paid, labor is placed on a com parable basis; Formal action was taken .by the Farm Bureau Btpard of Directors Saturday afternoon of which Arthur Balms’ iq president. The livestock committee headed by John. Munger also is opposed to the proposed action and both organizations have informed the OPA of their stand. Both organ/ izations were informed that a hear-,: ‘ng would be held in Washington Wednesday of this week to argue the; case,. ’ . . Pictures of Hawaii Shewn The high-school studmW were an j interested group last Monday morn-1 tog when Mr, Ira Vayhinger afforded the* school the priviledge o f’ seeing his colored slides of Hawaii* Mr. Vayhinger lectured also telling per sonal incidents concerning the time he lived to Hawaii* APRIL 1,1943 Re sure to reserve this date for the ^Senior Class Play. Initiates Become Members National Honor Society Initiation was a very impressive and beautiful service on Friday evening, March 12. About twelve former ‘members were present. If the miners' get their $2 a day increase in wages why not a $2'in crease for everyone else from the preacher down to the ditcher. This would of Course include editors. Farmers would not be eligible for such an -increase because it would' mean ruinous inflation under the Roosevelt yardstick. Keep your eye,on what the Senate will do with the,Roosevelt nomination of James V. Allred, D., Texas, as a judge on the U. S. Court ,of Appeals in the Fifth District, ’ New Orleans. Roosevelt is trying to repay Allred for his defeat as governor of Texas against Sen. O’Daniel, the senator of biscuit, fame. The Huey Long ele ment will use the “gun him" treat ment to ditch the Roosevelt nomina tion. Here is where the New Deal faces a real test with Southern Dem ocracy in the fight to a bitter end. Com Hybrid Results Results of the official Ohio" corn performance tests for 1942 are how available in special circular 66 of the Ohio Agricultural! Experiment Sta tion. The circular reports results from the more than 4AQ0 plots in 27 counties used to test 131 strains of -■om' in 1942. From the 1942 comparisons it is estimated that the 2,780,000 Ohio acres planted to hybrids yielded at least 22 million more bushel of shel led com than they would have yielded if planted ieties. to open-pollinated var- A good business associate of ours while down in Washington tells ua lie found a cheap place to eat where they had everything known in season. He was given a ticket to eat in one of a half hundred government .eating places in different public buildings. He says he had a lunch of a sand wich, pie ahd coffee for twenty-five ;ents. Try and find that elsewhere in the nation. The government eat ing places like the WhiteHouse are listed as “institutions”,, not subject to rationing. More than 100,000 per sons eat at these places each day. There is a sample of how your income tax money is spent, Not near all of it goes to pay for the war or the food for our hoys on the fronts or distant seas. Dayton schools closed Monday, The janitors and caretakers walked out on a strike for higher wagCs, This is the New Deal idea of the advancement of youth—roaming the streets. Dayton, has been inclined to follow the New Deal Communistic flag, it must reap what it has sown. Exposure of how a young New Dealer .was being kept out of the Army has .brought anything but credit to theDpA. A thirty-year old; Ginsberg by name was regarded nec essary to the price fixing game where the faithful wore hid from the draft boards, “Ginny” seeing- he faced draft-sooner or later tried to get one of- those store-shelved commissions much like what Democratic polit icians handed a few regulars in Greene county. The exposure caused | the army to refuse the commission. Stop. Hog Cholera Every effort should be made to stop' hbg colera this year. Veterinarians say that with the greatly increased numbers of*hogs on farms, it is very desirable to immunize the animalB. The cost of the treatment is small compared with the possible losses from a cholera outbreak. Shortage Of Farm Mechanics The County Farm Manpower com mittee reports' that la shortage pf welders,; blacksmiths and'mechanics to repair and service farm^machinery Ohio Senators split their vote on the deferment for farm workers‘in the draft. Sen. Taft supported the bill while Sett. Burton voted against it. . . . We have received a letter under flute of March 10, from y. V. Oak, Wilberforce University, expressing thanks for jiublieation of his letter in our last issue; In the letter he saysi ”1 am more convinced that it was not your intention to mislead your readers so. far as my letter was concerned. is ’another of the farm problems. They report that the war program had drained many.of these mCn from rural communities and the recent suryey showed that many townships and villages have been entirely de pleted of these ' service men. Farm implement dealers have difficulty in securing mechanics. . The shortage of machinery and labor makes it im perative that machines he kept to tip-top conditions* and that break downs be repaired as soon as pos sible, especially at the harvest sea son. The committee in Jefferson Twp., headed by Wilbur Beard is mak tog plans to secure welding and me chanic service for their twp. DEATH OF MRS. MYERS Eddie Rickenbacker, Golumbus born has been invited to address the Ohio legislature following b!s life and death experience afloat a rubber raft for days to the Pacific." He said -somethings about the New Deal man- agemtnt-of the war that did not suit Washington or organized labor lead ers, There are those who Would deny him the right of free speech In what the New Deal calls their “democracy". There has been a great discovery. A .week ago soup beans were on the '■fewDeal scare list. When rationing went into effect and letters poured into Washington protesting much of the rationVig program, a hunt was started to find more beans and low, and' beholdl Tim New Dealers say they found plenty of beans to Mexico, something Americans never knew be fore as exportation* show we have, men shipping beans to eat for*years to that country. Believe it or not. 'low we also hear there is a lot of anconsumed cof/ee to this country and Kattenborh over the air says that every Latin American country he visited on his three weeks trip has more coffee than they know what to do with. Americans as guinea pigs Under the New Deal communistic! system have been deceived, betrayed and lied to about much of this ratton- Mrs, Inez Bell Myers, 78, wife of Harvey Myers, died at her home Wed nesday afternoon at 4 p. m,, after a long 'illness. She was born Aug. 27, 1804 at Mineral Springs, O. She was married to Mr. Myers on June 21, 1882 and the couple resided here thirty-nine years. She was a mem ber of the First Presbyterian Church, . She leaves her husband, a daughter Wtoifred, and a son Herbert at home; Roy of Xenia; George and Nelson, Dayton; and John of Springfield, be sides a nqmber of grandchildren/ The funeral will be held at the Me Millan Funeral Home, Saturday after noon at 2:30 p. m» to charge of Rev, Paul Elliott ahd Dr. R. A. Jamieson. Burial will be ill Woodland Cemetery, Xenia, BUY YOUR NEXT SUIT NOW!! new and ; used $9 .95 , $12 .75 , $14 .50 UP long or it Don't *walt too may he too* late. MONEY TO LOAN On Anything of Value B. & B..LOAN Office 15 W, Mato st., Springfield, O, MAKE;MVKMt : **A7r»AT : W A * . BOND BAT smfmmm-tmtilum Prune and Look for Insects While he is pruning his orchard is a good time for the fruit grower to look for insect pests. Many insects such as San Jose scale,; oyster shell scale, -aphid, leaf roller and red mite overwinter on the bark of twigs and branches where they bo easily* observed during .pruning. Aphis eggs are dark,, ovel and shiny. If eggs of the red mite, which are red, very small,and round, are numerous a three percent oil spray shpuld be tu|ed, Leaf roller eggs are grouped in gray patches about the size of a fingernail, Their abun dance plus the past history of the orchard should determine the ne cessity of spraying. Sugar for Honeybees Beekeepers needing sugar to feed bees must register at his local Ration ing Board as an “Industrial User Of Sugar” and make application .for sugar on OPA form No. R. 315, The quota for sugar ip 1943 1s 10 pounds per colony. If this is not sufficient the beekeeper may' draw at the rate of five pounds of sugar per colony cn his 1944 allotment, Package bees started as new pro ductive units should he listed as col onics, Only white cane or beet gran ulated suger can he fed safely to bees. Due to the poor season in 1942 the feeding of bees' will be necessary iti many cases to prevent losses from starvation. A few ponnds of sugar syrUp will save colonies until the >ees can gather sufficient nectar and pollen from floral sources. Cedtrville Opera House “Sulphur And Mollasses” will he presented at the Opera House, April 1st. Come and see him! F. H. A. -St Patrick’s Dance ' “ Saint Patrick" was certainly to evidence Friday \eyening•when the F, H. A. sponsored a Saint Patrick’s dance at the school auditorium after which dainty refreshments were served. ., .. . . Epidemic Sweeps School Mr. Bartels hqs .been absent from school the past few days because of illness. Mrs, Jones of the commercial de partment was absent last Thursday and Friday. - Mrs. Halstead has also been absent for a few days. Teacher Resumes Duty Mrs. Wright -(Nellie Barrow) to expecting to resume her. work next week. Mrs. Wright had planned to return this week-end_i*i3t was detained because of illness. Tickets For Play Buy your tickets early from the Seniors. ,They will soon he seeing you. The price, 22c plus 3c tax for students; 27 plus 3c tax for adults. Friday 1 And Saturday Twin Thrill Days •—SCREEN—, D IANA BARRYMORE In “Nightmare” SUN.—MON.-TUES 1 Prisoners o f Xheir Past! A NAME TH AT STANDS f 6 r g o o d FURNITURE BUDGET PLAN AVA ILABLE A d a ir ’s H. Detroit St. Xenia, O. t i BMinmtiiimnitorhTtTiMiiiftrMriri'iiniiitHrTrtmriumwiP Inoculate Legumes The shortage of legume seeds to gether with the critical need for food demands that all legume seeds be in oculated before seeding. The in- oculanto now on the market contain mproved' strains of bacteria which are more efficient in converting ni trogen. Even on a soil which has grown legumes satisfactorily to re cent years it will pay to me the new noeulants. J M i — Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted, BEIUOKS R1NOL Recommended for .the relief RHEUMATISM ARTHRITIS an4 *. * LUMBAGO Well known In this vicinity ' Price— $1,54, 4 Retries $5.00 ■ FOR SALE Brown’s Drug Store CORNER PHARMACY Xen{a HORNBERGER Jamestown Unde Sam Says; “Don’t Watch The Bondsl” GO BUY! —-Chakeres-Warner ’ Theater “ S T A R \ T w t j SPANG LED RHYTHM ” Bing Crosby—Bob i s s M . * McMurray-— „ Dick Powell, Sat. Nit0 > AH New ■Ady|n(^trts»| “ T A R & W S TRIUMPH*’ Coining. Sunday “In Which We Serve” “ H I , R U D D Y ? Dick Forao Harriet HWlinvd S a t. Mar,,20 4 Day* .V• -“ ChetK& s” The FighvJng * Guerilla* K U i m N K l For \ “ HELL'S 4 Days jl ANGELS” WITH Joan Harlow. "Riders o f the N. W . Mounted" “ STANO BY FOR ACTION" —PLUS—- “ THAT OTHER WOMAN" Suh. ■ Mon. Tils*, r f 1400 ,.r»i ...iMt Ten pet cent of your Income in War Bends will' hetp te build the planes and tanks thatwill Inshre defeat of Hit ler and his Axis partner*. mm *i Experienced Typists and Clerical Workers, Steady em ployment, pleasant working condi tions, good pay. * McCall Corporation 2219 McCall St. Dayton, O. \ Reasonable Charges. Dr.C.E.Wilkin dptMhiirit:Eye Spedattat Xenia, Ohio QUICK SERVICE FOR DEADSTOCK XENIA FERTILIZER PHONE tt&i 4£i Reverse Charge* E. 0* Buehaieb, Xtdla, Ohio r ,n 5 L The Ce tog will at the bo Pvt- Gi ha* been i Ky,, to M toll U 'an4 Wanted tog hem,. Spracklin. trial * Wanted in good t Phene £ . a mi, R Mrs. W members . Thursday aewed for Mr. and London, f< are arnou ter. h 1 9 Y! r&ri Mrs. Ca den, O., I days here in-law anc1 McMillan. Mr. and announcing on Friday Hospital, now have Lost, st white sp< dog's reti to his Whir' See Ralph . thsi red; ;11 Mrs. R Fred Dob Elroy of A. R., att -to Golumb until Wed NeV v Mr. and tained m< Club at t ning witl ’ Prizes w f Edwards, Aden Bar The Ap *the home Reed, Clil ■Dr. and their dau; this weel Wiley wl operation ;s <cng i Mis* J the home'"' ! » ’• C. L? Met teaches ir. ... juLj CIVILIA? IZATIC LL'S SLS ' Wm. M Civilian nounces t: sections t citizens i volunteer! sires to's Mr. Mari The fol OW ; ! th, intej IER been, nan See, A —1 and Xeni line: Rob Marion I Smith, S’ ihon, Nel ering, Ru East S comer so J Ave. to I C. W. St.. Evans, I - North-i to East . corporati Leo Ai Claude 1 North Market v on Main Hughes, i ahfey, W. tington, James I Mills. Sec. 6- Otto Ke • ) i r 23 if yod t win ■, Hi a defe ds p« 4 T j >. Sti, work Fri. i m i l Al Dayto, VMOO... S elf 5RV Buh. | Gin P , ' V "THE NEW roc Wed. CA | A . ’* \ m “ PR ic fefsftii1 c. Etuis, . i
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