The Cedarville Herald, Volume 67, Numbers 1-26
m mm m wmm* T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D KAM.M BULL-----------------EDITOR AND PUBLISHER U«Uuri«l AttWM QW» awtHW* A mo &; M l»«l Y*a»» f tm AH*. Entered at tba Port Office, Cedarville, Ohio, otter 81, 1887, as second class matter. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1948 SIXTY-SEVENTH BIRTHDAY TODAY From the masthead on the first page you will note we are starting the first issue o f another year, the sixty-seventy mile stone in our journalistic recordings o f the community. The first *ssut of UrnEnterprise, later changed to “ The Herald^, and un der the present management to “ The Cedarville Herald , was back in 1877. The first issue under the present management was April, 1899 *. - ' ■' , , So far as the records show there never has been an issue mi Fed and we are certain none have been missed since April, 1339, WhSt the future holds for newspapers under present conditions, shortage of materials and manpower, no one can predict. Numerous daily papers closed down or were absorbed by other papers lastyear and more this year. ’ We can point with pride to the . loyal support the Herald has enjoyed locally and in the county these many years. CONG. BROWN AIDS DEMOCRATIC PUBLISHER There is one Democrat publisher in Ohio that probably wishes he published a paper in the Seventh Congressional Dis trict that he could support Cong, Clarence J. Brown in return for a recent favor. * ■ ’ This Ohio Democratic publisher who is postmaster in his city, sustained a bad break to his printing press, which could not be rera'red locally and, new partis were not tq be had. The publisher finding that he must have a high priority to get such repairs, called at Cleveland headquarters for the nec essary papers. After much argument and being informed there were “ to many newspapers anyway” , the publisher was almost ordered from the office of the government agent. » Being perplexed he did the next best thing and shopped a , ro; hd to get a second hand press. In this he was successful but he h, d'to have a steel reinforcement concrete base, Here he met the obstacle of not having a priority. Application was made ard this request was denied by the New Deal authority. All this was as if a loyal Democrat was being tried by fire r. r t ’edly. This publisher knew that he was a member of ‘ - association that had an executive secretary who . .rd. 'se what course to follow. Reciting' his past exper- Under Roosevelt dictatorship, the Executive Secretary got ' -uch-with Congressman Clarence J. Brown in Washington, w s informed of what the Ohio publisher faced and how “ ' •*<* been treated by the administration. ' ‘. ,e is anything a Washington New Deal bureaucrat , mort, it is a Republican congressman who knows that dic- ■md mandates are not law and that ninety-nine per cent of ■ ■■■*■New Deal is bluff. Moreover, the bureaucrats are not in good favor with eith- :i ?:■ of cpngress at present, and this includes all the Re- . ' ns and half of the Democrats. •A bureaucratic depart edd knows if a congressman takes his case to the floor of • House, something will happen quick and it will not be ap proval of a Hitlerized order. Within twenty-four hours after the request for aid was *n c-e of Congressman Brown, the necessary' priority was se u «d, after the Democratic publisher had waited for days tc ii hearing. What Congressman Brown has done for this Ohio Democratic publisher is just what he does for Ins Seventh Di'“ r et constituents. ’ However, do not take this fo r granted the v .pressman can get your son out o f the army. You have to i ye a priority from Winston Churchill to Franklin D. Roose- rs Commander-in-Chief for that.. Neither can the congress .■n get you a million dollar war orddr, To get that you-have to pay some New Dealer a “ commission” , the more you Ipay the bigger the order. *■' ‘ * ' k HELL OR A PRUSSIAN DEMOCRACY— WHICH ? Dorothy Thompson, noted woman columnist, in comment ing on the assault of a private in an Italian field hospital, when Lieut. General George Patton, W estpointer, slapped and kicked a shell-shocked victim against the protest of physicians and hos pital nurses, points out that Vwar is hell” and no parlor game for either officers or privates. She does not defend the General in his brutal acts when he did not know of the physical condition of the victim. She ar gues for Strict diselipine which is necessary at all times in bat tle or in camp but there is no necessity of brutality, especially when the private made no attack on the officer. The Lt, Gen Shame Farmers! We aat down in well-known Columbia eating bouse last Saturday morning for toast and coffee. Across the table was a well dressed gentleman who bad two eggs, two tissue strips o f bacon, toast, jelly and coffee. Bidding each other the "top o f the morning” we found our newly made friend was located in the city and worked fo r the government. He soon made complaint as to the cost o f his breakfast, 65c. Feeling a fine opportunity o f getting the slant o f a government worker on subsidy, we suggested it would not be long until the same bra&kfast probably would cost only 25c. * ■ ____ a. The subject was wide open with the remark and o f course the cure-all fo r city folks was to be the New Deal subsidy. The non-sweat worker re marked "tlie blame farmers were rob bing the people and still demanding more.” We agreed that might be possible, but in as much as Morganthau was demanding higher taxeB even on the white-collar-.class, to pay fo r the $9OO,OQ0,00(V Roosevelt subsidy, what j difference would it make? We argued it might be cheaper to pay more for eggs and .bacon than to pay more in come taxes. *#•*. H # m m tf? friegdi J» the oott&try. gays farmer had just ■old 42 chicken* fo r $*0.05, The saw* weak. .Mrs, F. says she purchased a chicken in Otncinnati Haricot and paid $2.60. Her ohfaktn was dressed. She says the lam e r sold hi* eggs fo r 46c ceiling price but when she purchased .eggs in a chain store she had to pay as high as T5e a down. She asks the Timoe-Sfcar ss to how we can expect the fanners to feed the world when they 'are forced to take such low prices for the long hours o f work from daylight to dark, More city folks should visit the country and find out fo r themselve* that New Deal liars are made-in Washington. The ambassador was asked ta say a the Indiana back porch, W . W.brmqfct: few words. He seised the opportunity up our question. This was his obser- to say (this, was in the late spring ration: o f 1940, a year and a half before Pearl Harbor) that it was the duty o f the United States to go all-out at once, in aid o f British. Lament indorsed these sentiments. Willkie, in turn, in dorsed everything that both Lothian "That question you asked .and I didn’t answer was, o f course, tremend ously important But lime’s the situ ation. I know, I’m positive that i f I should indorse Hi Johnson’s foreign policy o f isolationism, that if I’d ©*m- and Lamont had said. Mr, Taft re- : p*i*n on that issue, I ’d tick Roosevelt Then came the high prices quoted by -Walter Winchell in his previous broadcast. The u ty chap said he would rather believe Roosevelt and Winchell than any farmer, who was described as a "selfish, greedy indi vidual” who wanted to get. rich with, out work.” We inquired if pur friend j ever worked or had lived oji a farm. He replied: "Heavens no. ’ I wouldn’t even, be associated with a farmer” . We suggested the farmer must not be such a bad fellow since Roose velt had Until the last election always registered at Hyde Park as a farmer. His reply .was interesting. “ He only did that t o ' get the farm vote and they (the farmers)' fell fo r it. “ Don’t fool yourself, Roosevelt don’t giVe a damn fo r the farmers” , Was the next expression.' During the discourse ‘our j toast':and coffee vanished. - Shame, you farmers, that are getting rich sell ing eggs and bacon. W'g have had contact recently.with two American boys just back from the South Pacific war theatre. We said to the first: “How’ the eats?” , He re plied, "Bum, too much Jend-lease,” - The second, and neither boy knows we have talked to the oth*er, "How’ s the eats?” He replied "Fine, i f you like fodder, meigiiug dehydrated Jfood” Commenting he continued, " I hope those guys in Washington are forced some time to live on that bash they Bend out.” ' . We said to the second boy: "How's Roosevelt’ s campaign coming down under?” "That's baloney to us” . Give the boys a chance to vote and see if they have foregotten that prom ise "You'll only he. gone a year” . How’s MacArthur?” "Great guy.” " I f they’ll take back some o f those boats they gave England, we cap clear the Japs out in six month's and burn Tokyo o ff the map'.” “Bound for where?” “ York, Pa., to see Dad. ant Ma. -Is it true that- they only give us boys five gallons o f gas? Wait ’till I get back and tell the boys *boUt this gas' ration when England has enough stored in Shanghai! China, to last ten years ,and it was made by Standard 0|l, “ I hope Washington wakes up and gives us some new bombers by the time I get back.” A Senate committee finds the New Deal has 34,000 new typewriters in storage. Next day OPA lifts embargo' on sale o f used typewriters if y c have a priority. . • Buick plant making war supplies in Chicago lays o f f 3,000 employees. Kings M i II b plant dropped third trick employees. It is said the government has-170 billion rounds o f small am- unition in storage. That is 170,000 rounds for each o f the proposed 1( million soldiers; How long would it take a soldier to fire 170,000 bullets ? How many guns would he burn up? That’s how your income tax is spent. Even baby’ s diaper went}Iend-lease. Mammas ramsack local stores and write mail-order houses. D.iaper cloth went "lend-lease” . . Baby goes with out. Sen. Bridges has uncovered where 2,600,000 diapers were shipped to Africa fo r the.natives that did not i F o r m e r X e i t l a n know whether they were for headwear or handkerchiefs. The first shipment' totaled 450,000 yards or 600,000 dia pers. Qur good neighbor policy. E x p o s e s W i l l k i e Connections A Columbus newspaper man says) Eleanor R. will change the heading on j her daily column after December 31,1 |1944.. "My Day” Trill be changed to ‘I've Had My Day.” ■/ New Deal heads in the sand. Echo I o f the Roosevelt "Teapot Dome” . 130 i million squandered on oil in Canada. Six billion thrown awa{y in South ! America following Hen Wallace's Santa Clause trip and not a quart o f | free milk has been shipped yet. Mean Nelson Sparks, a native o f Xenia former Mayor o f Akron, manager oil the Frank Gannett, New York, cam paign for president at the last Repub Heap national convention, has written a book ehtitled "One Man” , and the Wall Street qnd political interests that backed Wendell Willkie, for the nomination. Willkie is pictured as the stalking horse for Franklin -D. Roosevelt, the Wiall Street interests ‘ being behind both candidates and sure o f .victory. fiTaHs-said-to4)e^ne-ofH>hV‘%lood-aad-gutsHype-of-W^stpxnnt=- t,™ - ^ rgd"^ au wantf C°” f :f s8 f 31In «>* meantime charges were hurled era. He usually fires a pistol with each command to his men. J!!1,3.8 a,ten bl ,10nnaw tex b,n ,n ad-1 far and wide bv the wfilikie and That is the Prussian military, rule that has been invoked in the»dltion t0 wbat wc have been paying' f r n i i e y t e WSll ie t Roosevelt followers that Senator What do Roosevelt, Wallace, Morgan- Robert Taft, Rep., Ohio, was the Wall than Co, care about your money ? |Street Candidate, The following editorial from the Ceiling prices; they save a lot of I imoney. Food prices going down. Farm prices likewise. Let’s see, IOnions grown in Texas brought the j Chicago Tribune is a good, review o f the ’One Man” book credited to Mr. Sparks: German army for a century or longer. Just how Prussian war methods fit in with civilized stand ards that are supposed to go under a democracy, even in war, the feminine writer does not explain. The fact that the incident happening in Angus’, and only made public in November, all commentators agree was a real blunder such as only a New Dcfllcr can ma'ka* An other feature news and radio commentator's have had I l ttrme* ? sack» New Deal ®rice, I “ The inside story o f how big money, trouble explaining is the fact Roosevelt recommended to the \n Boston>. ceiling price in cooperation with Park Avenue so Senate for confirmation Patton’s name for promotion to a gen- , 6I‘0 Head lcttuce placed on the e?” ciety and the British ambassador, eral, two months after the brutal attack on the Indiana private. « ... a. crate' F 6vemment price* foisted Wendell Willkie upon the Re The records o f the War department, which recommended ad-f,T1 , ,in ®ayton’ ^408, Cal* publican party as its candidate in vancement for Patton to the President, also prove the attack lforn S aad F °rida tomatoe8 net tbc 1^40 has at last been told in some which w a s a breach of military law, was known at the time l « rmeI , a.box.on, ca” f nd pnder detail by * *n*n who was In a position recommendation was made. It was only by the exposure by ^ * „ ? r ces t 8!*!, in *Cincin - 1to know how the job was engineered, a radio commentator the public learned o f the attack. . ? atl a^ *2,5J? a . ,Tlssue 8,ic5d He is c. Nelson Sparks, former mayor Under the New,Deal and the OWI, the American'people bae,oa-tw.° l ! c.cs w®,gblng onG°UnCeI °f Akron, O.* who, as Gannett’s man have little opportunity Of knowing much about their govern- C0?,^ • m. 0,1,0 restaurants.That is ager, had a ringside seat at Philadel- ment. When reports are given out the public is skeptical as to « oa 8 pnce‘, . i8„ city ;of phl8' He calls his book, “ One Man” , the truth o f them. Newsmen knew of the attack months before I1 ,? a p,°1Und e.° Clty.f° ks‘ Cltya neal P,&y “pen the title o f Winkle’s but under war time censorship o f the Roosevelt dynasty, they th,ere 18 a ^fw Dfal '7“ best se,,er, "One World,” dared to publish the facts as you know them today, * f, amer gett'ng ricb*, iMr,| "Sparks tells how Thomas Lament Just this week another radio commentator from Los An- „8f>- an 6 4 the Morgan bank was among tho gles, Calif., exposed.the work of a German alien who had a con- ,R .fa^rnei‘- first to take up 'Willkie, Another was tract for secret war protection in the Pacific months before the «trt.P ^ hJohn c °Flea o f the newspaper own- Pearl Harbor attack by the Japs. This same ° 0^ 888 « » 88 Moines and Min- New Deal politicians controlled construction companies that I ■ "J 8 1r" jneapolis. Sparks says Cowles is re- hadWar contracts in the Pacific and in Canada that totaled over ------- ,ated 1:0 Lament and had been assisted ' one hundred million dollars. To blind the public New Dealers Morganthau says all o f us have too by Lamont in the financing o f a news- Cried “ isolationist, unpatriotic, German sympathizer, Hitlerite” mucb money t0 9pend and be ‘wants P«per purchase, for nq other purpose than keep the public mind off th£ grafting J? double incorne tbXes' We suggest «A t this point, Gov. Stassen enters that Was going on all over the nation in war contracts, congress make public how much in- the stage. Ho had indicated a prof* Under the New Deal Americans have been forced to live T”1? tax RooseVelt’ bis wife antJ erence to Dewey, Cowles, who was in a wartime hell under, a Prussian democracy with a British fam,ly pay Howwuc}l does Morgan- close to Stassen, suggested that the premier dictating orders for more lend-lease and more of our j pay‘ ^ Yes>We doubt i{ the governor go east to talk things over, American youth for “ gun-fodder” , America is awaking to the ! r tef has t0 pay income taxes* He f t returned within a few days with fact her citizenship have been played for suckers, turning their ha8 had 8 public sale t0 86,1 more Lamont’s assurance that he would be pockets inside-out to pay income taxes while the New Deal I . 100 head 6 t dalry cows- ° uil' I temporary chairman o f the convention plunderbund raids the public treasury. The W ;& t Depat ment is being kept busy these days, prob ably more than should be forced on “Grandpa” Stimpson. With Drew Pearson drawing back the curtain on mistreatment of one or more o f our boys by high-hat army officers and Fulton Lewis Jr., exposing hundred-milHon-dollar war contracts to various companies under control of a German alien, it looks like a husy Winter for Franklin D. He may yet have to call in Winston for advice on how to handle New Dealers and a Congress that will not provide graft funds for the boys In the ranks building for Fourth term. ‘ ing he says because he has lost money and thus Would have the privilege o f each year' he owned the herd. Rich j delivering the keynote speech, He ny»n’s plaything. If you loose enough returned also’ , an enthusiast for money you do not have to pay income *Willkie, taxes. No\y that everone has his notice from Unde Sam and payday is Dec. 16, better purchase a dairy herd and loose money like Morganthau and you wijl become tax free, Mrs. Elisabeth Fancher, 2811 High land ave,, Cincinnati, writes the Times Star about tb« farmw and food abort- Tribune^ m faterimtienfet t)«wapap4r, “A week before the convention was . called to order a dinner was giyen by Mr. and Mrs. 0#den Raid, attended by the Lamont*, The Wlllklos, the Pills- burys o f Minneapolis, Robert Tafts, and Philip Herr (Lotti Lothian), who then was Rritish Ambassador, The Reids, own the New York ’ Herald fused to pay the price demanded for the support o f these powerful inter ests. He said merely that his position on intervention in the'-war had been made clear in the floor of the Senate and he had nothing to add to it, or subtract from it, in private. Shortly afterwards he excused himself and he and Mrs, Taft left before the other guests. “ Thus the barefoot boy o f Wall street passed his examination and Taft flunked, Willkie went into the convention supported by big money, big, social position, and the British embassy and came out the Republican' nominee. Mr. Sparks has a good deal o f light to throw on the use pf money by the Willkie managers in swinging delegations to the cause. How much was spent he does not know, but he is satisfied that it was a bigger sum than all the other candidates together had at4their disposal “ All o f this story checks with the previously known facts. It, checks, in particular, with the important bit o f secret history reported by John O’ Donnell in his column-in the New York Daily Neta on Nov, 8 o f this year, Mr. Q’ D.onnell was assigned to cover Willkie in 1940. He was recall ing a conversation with Willkie that 1 rnk place on Aug. 28, 1940,' “ in the twilight under the apple trees in the back yard of Willkie’s Main-street ‘ home in .Rushville, Ind This is the story as Mr. O’Donnell tells it: "Wendell was about to start his tour o f the nation. The wires that after noon had just brought Willkie word that Sen. Hiram Johnson o f California running on his traditional isolationist platform and denouncing the Roose velt foreign policy as the road to war, ,had received the senatorial nomina tion o f the Republicans, the Democrats and ^he Progressives o f his native state. “ That'political news was important, It meant that the voters on the Pacific coast, at least, regardless o f party, were against' the turning ovear (of over-age United States destroyers to- belligerent Britian,’ were against the Roosevelt torturing of internatinoal laws governing .our Roosevelt pro claimed neutrality. And what was Roosevelt’s White Hous* challengeer gonig to do about it,. “ As the reporters smoked vigor ously to banish the Hoosier mosquitoes and dug at chigger bites on . their ankles^ the Republican White House candidate told us that he had sent this telegram to the victorious Hi Johnson: " ’Congratulations on your magnif icent victory. It is (fortunate the people o f California recognize a true progressive even tho someothers iriay not.’ "The final phrase was a slap at ’Mr, Third Term Candidate’ F. D. R., who a fortnight before had barked back at Hi Johnson’s ’keep out o f European wars’ doctrine with the tart observation that the white haired old Bull Abuser, running mate o f the great T. R., ‘was no longer the liberal and progressive o f his earlier days’, - "Now, just as a footnote to United States Presidential campaign history, at that point we asked Mr, Willkie: " ‘Does your message of congratula tions to Sen. Johnson, who won his Victory as an Isolationist, mean that you indorse' his foreign policy or will you repudiate it ? ’ "Candidate Willkie asked that the question be put o ff the record, He said1he didn’t .want to say anything at that, time on such a ticklish sub ject. Now the important thing about this is that later, in a private talk on Friday A p d Saturday THRILL NITESI — SCREEN— ‘.‘Doctor Gillespie’ s Criminal Case” With Lionel Barrymore S U N . - M 0 N . - T U E S . worse than ha licked Landon.* "W e asked the natural question: “ ’ I f you think the American people believe that way and you- want to represent them in the White House a s . pur President, then why not come nut cold turkey and fight it out on the only line that counts?’ "Willkie gave a very frank answer; *“ I can’t do that because o f prom ises I’ve made—commitments which my friends and supporters have re ceived from me. And I think I’ll win anyway,’ “ Then we asked anothep—the one we thought —was our $64 question: ’And where does that leave the major-# ity o f the American people, who, you admit,, would elect a President next November who think as Hi Johnson does—-if they only had.a chance?’ / ‘There wasn’t any answer to that one, as we remember,” In the light o f Mr. Spark’s revela tions, there can ho small doubt^about the identity o f the friends to whom Mr. Willkie had made his promises He had committed himself jto><the Anglophiles o f Park Avenue, the big shots o f Wall street, and the British ambassador. - It was they who had picked Willkie; it was they whp had go. him the nomination; and it was for them that he betrayed the will o f the American people The charges made by Mr. Sparks and reinforced by Mr. O’Donnell are extremely serious. They demand answers. The columns o f THE: TRIB: UNE are open to any of the persons and institutions concerned who may wish to qualify or deny what Mr. Sparks and URr. O’ Donnell have said. Jay L. (Duke). Peterson, 23, Navy coxswain, writes 'that he has ha|d part in an attack on an enemy sub marine in the North Atlantic. He had also seen service in the Midway Island battle in the South Pacific. RHEUMATISM??? R INOL is the medicine you* need. Proven succe"»ful for arthritis, rheumatism, neuritis, lumbago. Free pamphlet at Brown’s Drug Store | When ACCIDENTS Happen [ | ‘ You Need j f PROMPT SERVICE j j STATE AutS S , | f INSURANCE | | Non-Assessable | | ■ ■ . \ Z j KENNETH LITTLE I | ‘ CEDARVILLE, OHIO f ‘’ifiitimtiimsiMiiMiiiMiiitiiHimtiiimiHiiiiimimiiiiHiiiiiiiiir |FARMS FOR SALE AND I FARM LOANS 1.......... ................T -.......— ... ......... £ We have many good farms for sale | on easy terms. Also make farm I loans at 4 % interest for 16 years. | No application fee and no apprais- | al fee. 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THEATRES JF Y&U/ W ednesday Mrs. I-auri ported serioij South Main ij Mr. Georgi tpent the w| Mrs. Anna $1 Mr. apd M daughter, Sal week in Dills The annua] held Thanksa o f Misses F]oij son. Rev. Herbs son, Paul, o f o f Mrs. Della! end,, Mrs. Jason Theresa were and Mrs, Claj week-end. Mr. and M Mrs. Fern Goj of Flora, India with Prof, anc Mr. Ralph ]j Murdock wej o f Dr. Walt Louisville, Ky,| • The annual dinner was hel^ o f Mr. and Ij Xenia. Mrs. Josep stock, O., an Toledo, O., s; home of Mr, Mr. Ira Towj ing several day Arthur Townslq several weeks. . Zachariah Ci Wednesday nij| Clifton. The ' . from Zion Bapl Saturday. - Word has be Walter Boase, • 1. in England. H! . A . P. O. 640 ii . N. Y..City. iyeek fo f Salt report to the i Bignment after - from active -dtl -Islands. Experienced Typists and Clerical Workers, Steady em ployment, pleasant working oondi- tions, good pay. , McCall Corporation 2210 McCall St. Dayton, O. Lt. Com, Rob^ is . stationed Bpeht the Than] iting here and companied by hj ters. The Jamiesoil nesday that tli E. Wiley was bi his company, lain F. E, Wilej Engr. Avn. Bn| _ P .O .in New-Y WANTED A~card “ shoy and Mrs. Jamei Pfc. James Roj -England and w ember 22. H 35418620 A . P. master, N. Yj overseas six ml Truck Driver for Cream Route Man or Woman. The Miami Valley Cooperative Milk Producers Association Dayton, Ohio.. Pipe, Valves and Fittings fo r water, gas and steam, Hand and Electric Pumps for all purposes, Bolts. Pulleys, V Belts, plumbing and Heating Supplies, « . J. P. BOCKJLETT SUPPLY CO. XENIA, OHIO ■iiiiinmMiWHBwmwiwwWUHiMtiminilHiwiMiimiwMH, Mr. and Mrs, led by Dr, and attended the i Dwight Sheltol Marion Steam 1 who died SatiJ a niece o f Mr. held from tn Church in Mail Pvt. Thomai has graduated automotive scl The course cm motive repairj all types o f an son o f Mrs, Dj QUICK SERVICE^ FOR DEADSTOCK XENIA f e r t il iz e r ******* *• < 3 *Bttihlieb, Xenia, Ohio ” Fri* ana Robert Fra “ Night Plan] Cartoon - Bun. and Red SkeH “ D U B A R R ; ' * I N « Wed. and Qtrtfo “They come ‘GwWMt- I
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