The Cedarville Herald, Volume 67, Numbers 1-26

Cgl&KVn!# SETOff, FRtnlt.tPRtr ST, IHI.' THE , C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D KARLH BULL —. ------------ EDITOR AND PUBLISHER, u y u i f ieH— M .iiiin t i jid lt o r l.1 A t » o c ,; O h io N u w m .a p e r A w o o .; M ia m i V a lle y P reim , A w n . T Entered at the Post Office, CedarviUe, Ohio, 'October 31,1837, as second class matter. ’ FRIOAyV^APRIL 21,'1044 ' ; ; THE PHILOSOPHY OF CONFUSION Low and medium-priced’ storekesper^rqm crossroads and Main streets have joined in complaints to OPA agamst jts^or­ ders freezing them to sales of women s and children s wearing apparel at prices no higher than their 1942 prices. They &r6 forcod to see their old custoincrs buy from com- petitors who were not in the loyv-priced apparel field tt^ yeais ago and are therefore not subject to the Mai ch, 1942, Highest Price Line Limitation Order, and can buy and sell at current prices,^ ^ . g .s not aji( the quality of merchandise has been cut to a new low in most every priced line. The truth irf fabrics law has been swept aside by the New Deal broom, The custo­ mer that purchases wearables is. paying the highest price, qual . ity considered, that was ever known. Even the chicken feed and the hog feed have been reduced in quality by induction of syn­ thetic products. Children’s clothing at present prices, which are no. fault of merchants for they purchase to sell what the Npw Deal permits the manufacturer to make, must not be held for price’or quality. Its all the part of the New Deal, if you voted for it. You would have'had the same experience even if we had no war. No philosopher, in OPA has yet explained this unexplainable ruling. **’„ ■________ ■■ - . CAN THIS BE TREASON? As we sat beside our radio a few evenings ago we heard an •unusual voice over the air lambasting the New Deal. That is unusual for the air waves are controlled in-Washington by the New Deal Communists; if the Dies Committee knows its alpha­ bet. We knew it could not be a Republican speech because the tone o f what we heard would have sent the Roosevelt gestapo into quick_action. You know Republicans must safeguard their statements rather than be accused of treason. We listened to the broadcast with interest as the speaker raked over th'e, administration for not redufeing taxes as was promised by FDR in his first campaign. Bureaus were lambast­ ed and the makeup charged with anything but genuine patriot­ ic intention, We, heard a defense of the American Legion and the criticism of FDR for vetoing the veteran relief bill eleven - or so years ago. At’that time F D R claimed such a bill would cost the nation two or three billion dollars and we could not afford-it. Then the speaker compared New Deal expenditures of the administration for some three million appointees, about two thirds of them New Dealers and appointed under Roose velt’s administration. . Next we heard, the name of Eleanor Roosevelt and a. lot of New Dealers, some on the. Supreme Court, all being criticized because they thought more of England and Russia than they did of America. And then this: “ I am for America first either in war or peace.” The speaker was none other than Martin I,. Sweeney, Cleveland, former congressman, a victim of Roose­ velt’s purge,1candidate on the Democratic primary ticket for g-overnor, and boasted of being openly against the New Deal, as we interperted his address. *■ Ohio Democrats in rural sections have several candidates to select from, James Huffman, son-in-law of former senator Vic Donahey, who the New Deal .has also marked for slaughter and Mayor.Lausch of Cleveland, the machine candidate. With a Clevelander for governor rural counties can expect nothing of benefit to that element. The state, surplus built lip by Gov, Bricker would melt like, ice cream on a hot stove. The Cleve­ land Mayor joined with the Dayton New Deal spenders trying to bluff Gov. Bricker in giving a share of the sales tax that be- longed to the rural counties to the two cities where the voters refused the, municipal officials additional funds by extra taxes or bond issues.” Rural Democrats had better watch their pri­ mary selection. It must be said in deference to H milton coun­ ty, though Republican, city as well, that both h ve operated within their income and never joined with Cleveland, Dayton, Youngstown, Toledo, Springfield and a few other cities, de­ manding that Gov. Bricker throw open the doors of the sjiate treasury to the New, Deal spenders. ■ 1 .. THE CORN CRISIS The price of .corn is fixed by the government and is again far out of line, as is evidenced by-the. fact that practically no corn is coming to market. In consequence, the corn processing industries are being forced to restrict their operations for lack of raw material. Many of their products 'afe needed by war industries and others contribute importantly to the nation’s food and feed supply. If something isn’t.done pretty, soon, the production of the war factories will suffer; because corn'pro­ ducts are widely used in foundry processes and in the manufac­ ture of cloth (for uniforms) and containers (for shells); Nothing is being done, partly because the big shots of OPA are unwilling to confess error, and partly because they fear the political consequences of doing the right thing. The. fundamen­ tal trouble, of course, is that a farmer can get something like $1.40 a bushel for,his corn if he feeds it to a hog, but only $1.16 for the same corn delivered in Chicago, Naturally the corn is being held on the farm. If the price of corn is allowed to rise, the farmers,Mil then cry that the government is discriminating iii favor of the farmer and against the industrial worker. If the support price of hogs is lowered, .the farmers will charge that they have been double crossed and they can prove it, If corn is imported from Argentine.' which has a . surplus, ships will have to be taken from war routes and 'there will be widespread complaint thruout the corn belt against the inva­ sion of the home market. That is why nothing is being done. The reasons are poli­ tical in thejvorst sense of the term. In the planned society, as this illustration shows, the planners are under no pressure to correct their mistakes unless important elements in the voting population have been adversely affected. As only insignificant numbers of people are employed in corn processing, they can be disregarded, The national welfare suffers* but what is the national welfare among burocrats? - —Chicago Tribune utMuiiiiiiiMimiumMmuMHumMMsumaiuimiMaMimiuitii Last week we were handed a clip­ ping from a local reader which quoted from Franklin D. Roosevelt’s speech in Boston relative to sending our ,ser­ vice men abroad. From the same par­ ty we hsfVe'this quotation taken from Roosevelt’s speech at Sioux City, in September :1932,: “ I accuse the pres­ ent (Hoover) administration o f being the greatest spending administration . , . in all history. One which has piled Bureau on Bureau, Commission on Commission. Bureaus and Bureau­ crats have been retained at the ex, pense of the taxpayers.” Several days ago we-saw a list of more than 100 bureaus and commissions created by Roosevelt. From another source we find.- there are 2,247 large and' small commissions that draw funds for salaries and help from the public treasury* all ut the expense o f income tax payers.; , R, M. Conley, formerly of this place .sends us a copy oil-' a letter from E. M. Biggers, Houston, TeXas, to Cong, H. P.. Fuller, S. C., Den We t: >ce this interesting statemen "I pro.ested to our Congressman when two • new post • offices were erected, in this county (Texas)—right in the midst of cheap gas, cheap and abundant fuel- oil—and. the heating plants were designed.and installed re­ quiring hard coal from Pennsylvania and other states. John L, Lewis was in the saddle, and the railroad boys were, whooping it up for more rail tonnage. The New Deal party grac­ iously complied. Was' it Tight, sensi­ ble or .honest?" . • - South Carolina does not think along the same line of Democratic thought in Washington. .Gov. Johnson says white supremacy will be maintained at the polls regardless of' the decision of the Supreme Court in the Texas case that legalizes negroes voting in both primary and regular election. The south can and probably will1re­ peal the primary laws and return to hand-picked conventions with the “ lil- ly whites” in control. ■ The Roosevelt family still keeps the front page on divorce news. Tuesday Elliott Roosevelt was divorced follow­ ing a suit brought by his wife on the charge of cruelty. The, wife testified Elliott courted a divorce. The two were married in Texas five- days foi­ ling his first divorce. Why should a government try to prosecute a sect who believe in “free license” when our number pne family just “ marries ’em and then divorces ’em ? Last week Col, Major, General, or could -it be corporal James Roosevelt’s ', second wife was picked up by police in Cali­ fornia for -violating the ' speed laws. No report has been given out where Mrs. R’s gas ration coupons' were lifted. James testified the wife was on an important business mission at the time . Holy, smoke! Somebody said Col.--Co.rpl, James was running the war on the Pacific. Who is run­ ning the -soft, drink business, exclu­ sive on all government camps on the Pacific Coast? of the soldier. A sensational trial gave liberty to the 21-year cj)d wife, who had been twice married, with the second husband in camp at the time o f her arrest. It was only about a week following her acquittal until .her own sister filed serious charges a- gainst the young, wife, who in her de­ lirium following her bar room exper­ ience and the horror,of her past lif^ as laid bare to the jury, sent her brain into a tail-spin. Her 'soldier husband- sat beside tier during the trial that lasted for days. A few days ago he filed suit for divorce. Twenty-one years of age, two divor­ ces, faced a murder charge and a Charge from her sister, would ordi­ narily become an object lesson to so- sciety and some effort made to re­ move the foundation trouble. Mr. Roosevelt told the world prohibition could not be enforced but there could be regulation of, no not the saloon,the substitute, the grill vooni, the cafe, the tavern and the night club. When the New Deal opened tile doors o f the successor o f the old time saloon, that did not tolerate women customers, the way was paved, fo r a rendezous for young girls, single and .manned. Church deacons, elders, trustees, Sun­ day School teachers, and preachers, if there are any that preach the doc­ trine of the New Deal and support the head o f the political-sect, certainly must have a bit of worry trying to co­ ordinate their conscience with the output being turned out by the Newl Deal’s successor to the old (fashioned saloon., Of course these groups nam­ ed can if they care to, refer to the White, House beer parties as prece­ dent. i the administration pleading wlt)i„ the populgce to remain at home and sav e1 gasoline and leave train car seats tor the service men naturally makes the publjt skeptical, until it knows tvhaife' an(l- how FDR made the trip. Mamina only traveled a. jittle over 100 ''miles mi one month but the ^White House ''says nothing about the freight tank car o f gasoline she has burned on •her (political)) good-will.barn-storm­ ing trips over the Pacific as well as South America. 1 NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT While the lipuor interests are mak­ ing hay under the New Deal we got information whereby a chaplain in the New Deal army is required to pay for his.share of beer, or- probably oth­ er liquors, whether he uses it or not-. Chaplains are commissioned, officers and are allowed so much per month for sustenance in addition to the reg­ ular salary. In as much as this chap­ lain is of the Presbyterian faith we! suppose the requirementsare essential to the winning, of the’ war. In the First World War the Kaiser announ­ ced a partnership with “ Got” . One- might conjecture if Old Satan had not forced himself into the Second War, in as much afe the Kaiser went down to defeat in the First War. A few days ago Gen. Mac Arthur frowned on a gift of a case of “ Scotch” to a recent hero. The irony of the gift was the supposed recipient did not use it and would not personally. We had the spectacle of the War Depart­ ment issuing a priority1for-.use of a big bomber to take five- cases of bourbon whisky to Gen. Eisenhower. Supporters of the New Dqgl and the administration have much to answer for. ■ ~ , i - Men and Women Needed for Factory and Office Work Frigidaire lias many attractive openings in factory and office departments for both men afid women, There .are many'jobs available oh top-priority airplane parts production. There are also attractive openings on essen­ tial refrigerator repair parts production. Good pay* exp­ edient working conditions, courteous instructions. If you cannot call in person, telephone (reverse the charges) and ask for Miss Potteiger on female employment* or’Mr, Patrie on. male employment. Our War Transportation department will help you arrange for rides if necessary. Applicants must comply with WMC regulations. . F R I G I D A I R E Division of General Motors Employment Offices — 800 T*yl*r Street, Dayton A Chicago broadcaster on the Wcstinghousc program calls attention to a treasury statement which shows there is'a billion less in gold reserve at the end of March over the month previous. The public has been told we would have inflation if gold were in circulation. Our guess is that tho billion in gold will never circulate in this county . We would rather be­ lieve it is in the Bank of England. Wo lencL...lease..,to the .British. •Do the British get paid in our gold for the afr bases we have on English soil? The broadcast so far has brought no denial from the White House or the treasury. A sixteen-year-old daughter front a prominent family in a nearby state; with a group of young folks made the rounds of n ightclub! for nights in her community. The night club being* a New Deal product. With a liquor soaked brain the young, gii-1 returned home one night last summer when she shot the ' father and her six-year^ old brother. Months Inter the g irl^ n s tried for the murder of the father, a former' prominent ■ - official. The jury cleared the girl, The sequel to the trial pnd jury Ver­ dict was another jury and court hearing a few days ago when the girl was adjudged insane and sent to a state institution; probably to end her days at the expense o f the state. Be­ tween the inflamed brain and the hor­ ror of murder that haunted the girl day after day following her acquittal made the last verdict an easy task for the jury, and a verdict that will not likely be overturned in tfto days to come. The recent meeting of-dairy farm­ ers in Dayton where the fast and slow time was discussed* and a resolution passed urging Dayttm to stay on slow time evidently provoked the editor of the Dayton Daily News, who always, pictures the farmer as one o f those selfish, grefedy individuals, unpatriot­ ic, because He does not want to get up in the middle of the night to dp his milking so that the milk can be de­ livered to the city folks before they arise at 1^9 a.,m. with breakfast in bed.. Nothing not New Deal goes with the News editor. His yard stick is all for the cause of'the city folks regard­ less of what it may cost'the farmer in time .worry or inconvenience. The Nows speaks for the golfers. It can­ not be said it represents' the factory laborer for the laboring classes in the city have and are still opposing the proposed time change. If you are not New Deafish you are not patriotic It has been said one must be judged by those who uphold, him while the followers of an ndvisary . some times are left to their own-"embarrasment, Jay Franklin, at least that is the name of one who writes a column for city papers that, have following, even though the editorial policy might be the opposite as it is in the case we refer to. .Franklin .is a defender of the New Deal. He.pleads for what he terms the “ under-trodden” in society and abhors all who have elevated themsel­ ves by. their own initiative and self- sacrifice. In his, opinion personal suc­ cess is treason to society as he would define the obligation o f the individual to the state.; His theory ig the state comes first, before the church or the American home and school. His idea of life is from the collective view1 point, a thing our forefathers abhor- ed in the centuries before Plymouth Rock. Franklin preaches the doctrine of the New Deal daily. While he is pleading for a lighter load from his class, he defends New Deal waste and public to him has no terror.. He finds* solace in espousing the AAA, OPA or any organization that can be used for New Deal political advancement. Franklin measures the farmer as did Henry Menchen, who once wrote: “ He (the farmer) is no hero"at all, and no priest, and no altruist, but simply a. tedious fraud and ignora­ mus, cheap rogue and hypocrite, He deserves all that he suffers under our economic system, and more. j “ No more grasping, selfish and dis- .honest mammal, indeed,- is known- to students of the anthi-opoidea. When- the going is good for him he robs the j rest of us up. to-the extreme limit of our endurance: when the going is bad he comes bawling for help out of the public till . . . . Why, indeed, are pol­ iticians so polite to him—before elec­ tion, so romantically amo.rous? . Fori the plain aiy'. simple reason that only one issue ever fetches '■or interests him, and. that is the issue of his own profiti He must be promised some­ thing definite and valuable, to be paid- to him alone, or he is o ff after some mountemank. He •cannot imagine himself as a citizen of the common­ wealth, in duty bound, to give as well as take: he can imagine himself only as getting all and giving nothing. “ Yet we are asked to venerate this prehensile moron as the ‘Urburger’ - the citizen •par excellence, the found­ ation stone of the state. And why? Because he produces something that we all must have---that we must somehow get on penalty, of deuth. And how do. we get it from him? By submitting helplessly 'fo. his uncoii-- scionable black-mailing—-by paying .him, not under any ’■rule of reason, but in proportion to his roguery and incompetance, and hence to the dire­ ness of our need.” Such is the appraisal of the farmer who takes the New Deal bribe: con- 'demned' because he takes what is of­ fer without condenmnation of the the one who gives away that which does not bel'ong to him—in the hope of gaining political reward. . . The New Deal..bureaucratic follow-, era, a product of. the new order, find the exponents of their own political creed blistering those who get a gov­ ernment dole as a political bribe. Heck, has been duly appointed as Ad- Notice Is hereby given that Casper Dck has been duly appointed as Ad­ ministrator o f the estate of Zettie Deck, deceased,: late o f CedarviUe; Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 12th day o f April, 1944. WILLIAM ~B. McCALLISTER, Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. MOVIES Now Showing LEGAL NOTICE Agnes Jenks, whose place o f resi­ dence is unknown and cannot with reasonable diligence be ascfePtsfned, •! will take notice that on. April litb ,.j 1944, Russell L. Jenks filed his p e ti-; a Communistic ftion agaifist her fo r divorce on the grounds, of gross neglect o f duty, . said case being No. 23467 on the j docket of the Common Pleas Court of Greene Coimty, Ohio. Said cause will come on for hearing on or after May 27th, 1944. ■ (4-14-Gt-5-12) • ’ MA&CUS SHODP, Attorney'for Russell L, Jenks, ANN SHERIDAN Dennis Morgan In “ Shine On Harvest Moon” LEGAL NOTICE No^v M argaret O’Briani •Iflmes Craig In ‘LOST ANGEL’ Pvt. John W. Ryan, 35127102, 921st Guard Squadron, and residing at Am- arilla Field* Aiharilla, Texas, will take notice that on February 29th,'- 1944, Dorothy Ryan filed her certain petition against him for divorce on the grounds' "of" extreme' cru e lty -and” gross negelct of duty, said cause be­ ing case No. 23430 on the Docket of the Common. Pleas Court of, Greene County, Ohio. That said cause will come on for hearing on or after May 13th, 1944. (3-31-6t-5-5) MARCUS* SIIOUP, ’•Attorney for Plaintiff. ■ RICHARD DIX In “ The Whistler” T—plus— , Donna Drake “ Hot Rhythm” NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT. Estate of-E. C. Payne, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that Martha A. Payne has been duly appointed as Administratrix of the estate of E. G. Payne, deceased, late o f Cedarville township, Greene County, Ohio. •Dated this 27th day o f March, 1944 WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. — Sun. For \ Day' JEAN PARKER “Lady In the Death House’,' . PLUS “Texas Masquerade” LEGAL NOTICE . Alvin L. Beaman, you will take no­ tice that on the 20th day of March, 1944, Virginia Beaman filed her peti­ tion for divorce on. the grounds of gross neglect of duty. Prayer of the petition is for a di­ vorce from you and the- custody iof the two (2) minor children. Said pe­ tition will be for bearing on or after six (6) weeks from the first publica­ tion. <3-24-6t-4i28) I iSMITH, McCALLISTER & GIBNEY ‘ ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF Sun. Mon. Tues. I r e n e . Manning Dennis Morgan IN “ Th e Desert Song” 650 NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate -of Albert Lewis, Deceased. Notice is hereby'given that Ruth A. Lewis has been duly appointed as Administratrix of the. estate of Al­ bert Lewis, deceased, late o f Cae.sar- creek Township, Greene County, Ohio Dated this 21st day of March, 1944 WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate. Court, Greene County, Ohio. Remember when Roosevelt put skids under Thanksgiving? Well the change in time is just as^ silly. There is no saving for the power companies find it good business when millions must burn lights at three and four o’clock in the morning. Why has not some one suggested going to work at seven in the morning instead of eight for [the stores or two hours earlier for industry and let the clocks alone under the News mode o f measure­ ment? Here is the lates expression from the News ' editorial column on the time question: “ It is a question of patriotism, not of personal conven­ ience; a question of where patriotic duty lies. tOur fighting men, it will be noted, get up very - early in the morning,” It might also be pointed out that "oUr fighting men” are from the rural sections. In proportion to1 population thei'e are more deferred men in industry, sons of wealthy manufactures not'fighting than there are sons of farmers, who have been deferred that never worked on the farm until .the war struck the nation, BABY CHICKS Wyandolts, Rhode Island Reds, White Rocks, Lephorns, Barred Rocks. . All blood test­ ed chicks. Place your order with Mrs. Hester Cultice, Ce­ darville. Phone, 6*2264. V. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Roy- D, Inman, Deceased Notice is hereby given that Betty Inman has been duly appointed ’ qs Administratrix W. W. A. • of the es­ tate o f Roy D, Inman, deceased, late of Cedarville; Greene County, Ohio, Dated this 2nd day of March, 1944. WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. In a neighboring city in this State a drunken young married - woman had becomo infatuated with the clement that soon made her a habitat of what is recognized as New Deal headquarters all over the land. Hav­ ing met up with a service man, who accompanied this young wornan to her room, the story ends by the police arresting the woman for the murder Jt would nof do to miss this more or less unimportant news item from the State of Virginia. A republican has been elected to the State Senate from a district that never has gone Repub­ lican before. Can it be a sign of the times? All this sudden outburst from the White House about Mrs, Roosevelt only having one car and with it only an "A ” card, To be explicit the mile­ age was even given, How Franklin D, got to “ somewhere in the south” is in the mouth o f the public, With Friilay And ^ jilu r iJ a y TIJRIM NITES! —SCREEN— “ W EEK END PASS ' with' Noah Beery, Jr. and ^M a r lh a ffD rk co lb SU N -M O N -TU E IT'S TECHNICOLORFUL! mm, w A NAME THAT STANDS FOR GOOD FURNITU R BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE V = i N “ »•* Adair's Detroit St, Xenia, O. m ifM IIIIIIIII'IM n illlU ltllllllltfe lllllllllllllilltU lH M M M M H lM I* I FARMS FOR SALE AND j I . - ’ - - FARM LOANS I j = We have many, good farms for sale | J ! on easy terms. Also make farm | 1 1 loans at 4 % interest for 15-years. | § No application Ice and no apprais- § | al fee. | = .Write or Inquire. | | McSnvancy & Co. London O. I Leon II. Kling^-Mgr. 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' ’ sa S3' . . a •B ' ■ * n v ■S . fit;-- ■M ^ v ' - i ii .0 n N ER tie f; ■III! 03 I J ' [ I ! 11 . *i"W */ V V y I ? ■ i t T TT 1 i I Eyes Examined, J. P. BOCKLETT SUPPLY CO. XENlA, OHIO Glasses Fitted, iMitiiMMiMniMMitiitHUMMiMimimmitiimiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiti3 s.i Reasonable Charges. I •! f •s i § •r. C l E. Wilkin ft Optometric Eye Specialist / Xenia, Ohio immitinttttiuimimmmuHHtuiitkumiiimiiuiiiiutmii. 1 QUICK SERVICE FOR DEAD STOCK “ XENIA f e r t il iz e r PHONE M’A. 454 Reverse Charges E. G. Buchsieb, Xenia, Ohio I ; * - f £ ? ' t ? ¥ - .¥ x ■ -T X Tt - ¥ ? T ¥ ¥ ■AN] RM irm ) mi for j no quin L M; ■ St< vork on aytoi Fitt m, fi all Its, 1 t. CL1 C< IIO R V OC A erse enia,

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