The Cedarville Herald, Volume 66, Numbers 27-52
f) 9 T H E C I D A i . V I I . t E H I . R A t D yAttT.tr BULL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER « p p h ^ M U 4 M » i f l * ****** * * * * * * * * Y**" * * * ****• Bntemd « t the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 81 ,1887 , a* second class matter. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22 ,1943 T H E N E W D E A L ‘ T E A - P O T D O M E ” ’ When a New Deal government agent facing a congression a l committee this week admits open scandal in the manner In which war funds were being- used* recalls that famous *Tea- Pot Dome’*, that Rqosevelt charged was o f Republican birth.” * There is pending New Deal legislation that would give *thetwar department alone sole control over all war contracts even to settlement o f claim?1 should orders be canceled immedi ately. It was op this bill the government financial expert risked his o ffice holding when he admitted scandal in connection with war contracts and. payments. Being .under superiors, the agent, was not personally responsible but he braved all.admin istration threats t o give the committee 'and the public some inside workings o f how contractors were growing rich, The Congressional committee was shocked 'when it was made public aB to what some items o f expense approved by war department officials w e re ,; For instance under one war con- tract the manufacturer listed the cost o f a set o f false teeth. He charged the government with donations o f cash to the Red Cross and Community Funds, giving away government money. These items o f expensive, cigars, cigarettes, liquor, and all . sorts o f commodities charged to, the government under the famous Roosevlt “ cost-plus” War contracts. With the treasury calling fo r ten billions o f new. taxes, the government pleading to purchase bonds to carry on the war; with Mrs. Roosevelt riding the air waves to Au§tralia and using 23,000 gallons o f gasoline how can Roosevelt and his plunderbuhd crowd fa ce the charges laid before the Congress ional committee this week? / There are 90,000 New Dealerr ' on the public payroll, in. the state o f Ohio , alone. For this salary list you are.asked to pay more taxes. There are several thousand? on the A A A payroll. More thousands on the OPA and the rent control setup. There are so many on the government payroll at Pattersor Field, employees that have purchased bonds on the monthly payment plan, have complained they in many cases have been paying out fo r months and yet have neither a receipt or a bond to show fo r the deductions on each pay check.. The New Deal graft is said to amount to millions-much greater than any former “ Tea-Pot Dome.” ROOSEVELT, LEWIS AND YOUR COAL ^ If the mercury was 10 above the average reader Without coal would read comment on the coal situation with more in- ‘ terest than would be expected with the mercury at 70. The, recent cold spell'brought out that hundreds o f homes in this community have little or n o coal. Reports from adjoining counties say rural schools and churches have no winter supply as yet. . The fellow that gets blamed fo r every coal ill is the local dealer, because he is the closest citizen that has anything to do with. coal. The miner or the operating company mean little to a lot of-people in discussing where the trouble lies in this coal shortage. ” , Strikes o f miners and general nosing in o f the. New Deal has caused trouble between company and employees. Strikes have cost the nation a lo t o f coal. •The miners want more pay The New Deal says no. The miners sort o f sulk in their tents Goal production drops around 500,000 tons in a given time. Miners are indifferent follow ing New Deal dictation and reg ulation in addition to a personal fight waged by Franklin D Roosevlt, and government agencies, to defeat or weaken John L. Lewis with his miners. Lewis has so fa r won every point, Lewis arid Roosevelt were political buddies several years and both are credited with creating the “ sit-down-strike Lewis poured 8100,000 into the Roosevelt corruption campaign fund f o r political purposes. ' Later Lewis charged Roosevelt double-crossed him, a New Deal trait. Few sympathized with Lewis if Rqosevelt did the trick and the public thought less o f each. Money in big chunks in a presidential election means a .trade or bargain was made between the two leaders-nothing ■else. r . . ’ The miners are out dn strike in sevral states. Winter is here but Roosevelt is thinking little o f the cold homes and the possible suffering among the aged and the children. He is out tq kill o ff Lewis at what ever cost is necessary. Lewis is just as determined and has the hacking o f more than 3&0,000 miners, The administration intimates drafting fo r the army to all miner strikers. A t the presidential door is another strike br Ing-rallroad employes. Th« public must pay fo r the Roosevelt-Lewis follies. It is your show if you voted f o r the New Deal. THE WAR, THE CHURCH AND THE NEW DEAL .. Certainly America faces a dangerous situation on the home front. "• It 1b common in these hectic days to place the blame o f moBt everything on the nar. A . Greene County boy high in the service o f the nation returns linnTrfo find rfi InViny (|| public places, intoxication o f not only women but young girls, shock ing. ' He finds gambling and questionable places operating wide open as if no war was in progress. He wonders about the sacrifice o f the boys in the service against the sacrifices o f the folks back home, t This Greene county youth states he entered his home church only to find its half filled pews while boys suffer and die in filth on the Pacific front, He calls our attention to a report o f the FBI about immoral conditions in the country and little or nothing done about it, Other than to blame it on the war. He,cites some figures from J. Edgar Hoover, that the arrests o f girls under 21 had increased 55.7 over the year 1941. Arrests at the age o f 18 outnumbered all other ages fo r male and female. Juvenile courts are crowded, with cases that never reach the public ear or even the public print. Organized vice is prey ing on yourig girls in war industry and around War camps. The New Deal Administration says it is a local problem. Local o f ficials Are hampered by federal and military red tape more often than hot in running down such cases. It is admitted that absence from the war work bench by both men and women' has been traced to the use o f liquor and the infamous night club, , the worst evil ever known ..Washington wants to regulate Vour habits, what you eat and what; jNftt wear. It says nothing about moral conduct on any issue at any time. It opened way fo r repeal and the brothel house afe we have %taday. Whatever court record there is oft juvenile delinquency, what ever record the FBI has, must in the main be charged to the N ew -B e a t -. : T •■■■■* The hone o f the nation in the future lies with the Christian church, Protestant, Catholic and Jewish, No economic plea fo r a post war future will ever be founded until there is more Christian Conversion in high and low places. What the Greene county youth saw on'his trip home on furlough will be carried back to his buddies In the camps and fox holes, It is no wonder these bovs making the supreme sacrifice wonder at what we term natrtotfsm and what Is appended to it by the tha " « « * Cto<H Dairymen will be interested to know that Sec. Morganthau, has con signed his dairy herd o f more than 100 head for public gale in New York state and the advertising fo r tbe «- vent is now appearing in Eastern pa pers, Tbe man-power situation and the shortage o f feed are given as the reasons. It is evident that even multi-millionaire New Dealer, boyhood churn o f FDR, does not relish the idea o f providing milk at govern ment fixed prices and feed high priced if feed can he found, A sur jy shows more than 300 herds o f dairy cattle have hen sold or will have been sold at public sale this month in some eight states, There%must be b reason, Morgapthau may not care to have his herd milk sent all over the world as Henry Wallace suggests, especially when he can not .get cost o f produc tion. Costs never bother Wallace. When the five U. S, Senators took the trip around the various war fronts and then came home and attempted to give an accurate and honest report, regardless o f who it hit, such was the signal fo r FDR to get out his. trum pet and his branding iron making liars out o f the group, even the Dem ocratic Senators. Roosevelt once said he did not owe the Democratic party anything as there was npt. enough of them to elect anyone, t ■’'Hist bounds like a Willkie campaign ‘b la st;"- ' What the Senators had to say, hit both Roosevelt and Churchill. That the truth must have been brought to the surface is proven b y the attitude o f the London, Eng., newspapers- T&p Senators as much as said the U. S. was being milked by England in and -out o f the war aiid we were to con tinue in the same role after the war. The British o,r even the White House have not disputed the statement that England removed the label frqm -A - merican made goods and substitute, the British'. Then there was the re port that goods supposed to have been sent to both'Russia ano to China finally landed in England. Natural^ the. English do not relish such pub licity. They like our money and our- free “ Lend-Lease” , everyday food and goods. We purchase bonds supposed ly for supporting the war. We Amer icans stand fo r heavy income taxes. Now we awake to find out we are the suckers holding an empty bag in a lonely spot at the midnight hour, Now would be a good time for FDR to start-the old wheeze; “ More bun dles for Britian” * Then wal tyMMtii* I a » bCU dWrtUd In. th* SaAfcte on Wednesday, It Wat the New Beal, proposal fo r the fed eral government to Aid In financing the schools in the couhtry. It was a “ pouth o f Dixon Line” movement, where they still pay as little as forty dollars a month fo r white school teacher* and f2S a month fo r colored teachers, During debate someone of fered an amendment that would pro hibit the federal government from discriminating on account o f color and race. That started the fireworks. Thor i* never any New Deal or any other ..kind off Democracy when i* comes to drawing the color line oi even eliminating it. FDR spits and spurts democracy but not for thr negro, I f he wanted' equal rights lu would send one o f those “ must bills'' to Congress compelling southern stq tea to admit the negro on equal term,', as the whites, But he does not. He even evades and has never called or even New Sealers tq support the anti lynching law that thas been held up fo r three or four years due to south, ern Senators and' representatives threatening to desert the administra tion. . The proposed educational bill was sent back to the original com mittee where it will die a smothered death. No more money for negTo school teachers south o f the-Mason and Dixon line- Here is a tip/- Dads even up to 45 years o f age are slated to be called sometime -after January. 1st. Those who are single are to be called first. Then married with no dependents and fathers next. Also look for an over turning* of fill farm hfelp. The exemp tions and deferments where the AAA and County War Board chairmen fig ure have been so Crooked and unfair the smell is all the administration can stand. You can count on something happening. The farmer is “ persona non grata” with the New Deal at present' and FDR is going to apply the laSlt- Many a boy who thinks he has bgen exempted is to be cal}ed again and examined under a lower physical standard- Roosevelt under War time power does not have to rec ognize any law congress may, pass. He is gppreme dictator with more power than even Hitler or Mussolini have enjoyed in enforcing their “ brand o f democracy,” . There Is a big pow wow now gor ing on in Moscow- Sec. Huh {.« there to meet Stalin and pave the way for the-big tops, Roosevelt and Churchill at abater conference. The fly in the ointme'nt is that Stalin wants Poland as part payment for her part in the war.' Roosevelt and Churchill swept blood on that issu'd after promising freedom to all oppressed people, ex cept countries under British rop|ppl, WefwiH fight Russia next, S g g g ? T ,M term tttbU ? L the H# topis ia ConffMfc The farmer is forced, to take lose than war time price fo r hi* product*. Hogs this week went under the ceiling, much to the joy of John Lewis, Bill Green and Phil Mur ray. No doubt FDR smiled as the slum pinched the farm foot. The. farmer in most eases today b an in come taxpayer. Under tl\e Roosevelt subsidy plan the farmer would gCt a nibble. The New Deal then would increase his income, tax rate and take -back the amount o f the subsidy plus some more profit. At least that is the .way Morganthau sa^ra subsidy must be financed to get lower living casts- The average faqiily might save 65c a year on butter under the sub sidy. Morganthau wants ten billion more in new taxes, I f bis request is granted by Congress it will cost the butter purchaser whether a farmer or mechanic $2,50 more income taxes than last year. Childish, you say? Yes, it is the New Deal. Leaders o f the three farm organiza tions are -on the battle front fighting the. Roosevelt subsidy and they are also fighting the attempt to put gar bage reduction plant oils and fats in what we call “oleo” and then brand the substitute as butter. The Farm Bureau, the Grange and Co-operative openly oppose any form o f subsidy. The fanner’s union, with a limited i membership, led by Patton 1 b ' credited as being a New Deal outfit with la bor organization backing to sell Roosevelt and the New Deal to farm ers,. MaSftMi UrigAN. Thai* wfll be kw» gresu regetabJef this' winter as Flor ida grower* fact man-power shortage and a low fixed price ceiling that does not permit a reasonable profit- Qtv angea are now off the market unless you want to pay BOe % dozen and knowwhere to get them. What a field for the black market? NGFIELD ■ novas ■ No Show ing « O L D C E D A R V IL L E ” (edod ptjjf w * f p9nui}uof)) .. The subsidy gives the editorial page o f the Day ton'Daily News an oppor tunity to lambast" the farmer aqd preach lower Cost of living. The News always pictures the Farm Bureau and the Grange as open enemies o f the American home, a group o f greedy politicians that never, represent the -farmers who work but. the farm man agers, The News pats Patton and his farmer’s union, backed■by CIO and AFL, on the back as representing the real dirt farmers. Nptbiqg can be farther from the truth, The farm- os that are .feeding ’ the.nation are represented by the Grange and the Farm Bureau. The News editorial statement i s hot only untrue, bu tan1 jnsult to even Montgomery county farmers, not one o f any hundred be longing to even the Patton union. . T(te news is fqy a n tin g organized labor asks for, right- OPwrong-. With thd shortage- o f meat, fruit, tobacco an.d a lot qf. other things, the printers and publishers now face an other reduction in newsprint o f 16 per cent next month. Certain grades aiid weights o f writing paper are now o ff the mgrkgt W?<* ppvefopes are about The man was the school-janitor, living in the school yard, *hd he was setting fire -to a woodhouse almost across the street. For a number o f years his address was Columbus- , As to the school-houses, probably not one is living who attended what was “ The fjriek School” at the sotrih end o f Cedar ( ) street excepting sister Ada and myself fa th e js rirool- year 1858-59, while our Tarm house was being built- There was a spring, brick walled, at the fa r end o f the schoolyard, and a break in the cliffs opened a narrow way down to the creek. Very few will recall seeing the schoolhouse about a mile up Col umbus pike. I recall it when school waB held, there. But the district was divided up, and not .long after the building disappeared. 1 But the Old Grove School is the one interesting to folks, if any, o f nearly three generations ago, are living. A scholar and school teacher by nature, a James Turnbull erected the build ing and organized a Select School, It flourished, wjngs on either side o f the central building were addend. These were situated in a grpVe o f large sugar trees. Mr. Turnbull died and the tovrii bought'the school for the town schpql. THiW*. oat. at 1 Wk. £ . anna F o s te r In t!v iflwitom o f T S ifrO p e * * " (In Technicolor) ii« i 1 d .. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Robert Fred Bird, De ceased. Notice is hereby given that Mary E. Bird has been duly appointed as Ad ministratrix o f the estate o f Robert1 Fred Bird, deceased, late o f Cedar ville, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 18th day o f October, 1943. WILLIAM 8 . MeGAhLISTgR Judge o f tbe Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. RHEUMATISM??? RINOL is the medjcine you need. Proven succw-Tiii for arthritis, rheumatism, neuritis, lumbago. -Free pamphlet at Brown’s Drug Store. jiiiimiimmm iiiiiiiiiiiHiiOiiiiiiim iiM iiniM itirM iiM iKiiiiirti | Wheji ACCIDENTS Happen | ? » » NjSrf ‘ I P R O M P T S E R V IC E J o m A m p AHterorijite I . 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