Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 266, Decatur, Adams County, 10 November 1921 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DAILY DEMOCRAT

Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. JOHN H. HELLER Editor ARTHUR R. HOLTHOUSE, Amoelate Editor and Business Manager JOHN fi. STEWART. ....City Editor Subscription Rates Cash in Advance Single Copies 8 ceftts One Week, by carrier 15 c Ttf > One Year, by carrier $6 00 One Month, by mail 35 cents Three Months, by mail SI.OO Six Months, by mail $2.00 One Year, by mail... $3 50 One Year, at office $3.50 Advertising rates made known w application. Entered at the postoffice at Deca tur, Indiana, as second-class matter It has been established that you can't clean house with a dirty mop. ■BBS"* X Tomorrow is Armistice Day, observing the close of the great world war and business will close almost universally throughout the country. The day has been declared a holiday and will so be observed in every city, town and hamlet, while reverence is paid to those who sacrificed to save the nation and the v.-orld. The returns from the elections in Indiana are pleasing to most democrats for they gained in every place and won the offices in most of them. Roberts was beaten at Terre Haute and Bunch at Muncie and in other places the democrats cleaned their own house. Shank won at Indianapolis but he will not help the republican cause for his party leaders cannot and will not agree with him. He will lead the fight for Beveridge it is whispered and will probably succeed in beating New at the finish. The democrats have controll threefourths of the cities and this was the first skirmish after the normalcy program started. The armistice convention meets tomorrow. We hope there shall be the greatest uniformity of opinion that will eventually mean what we all want and all should fervently pray for world-wide peace, good will towards all. War is a crime. It means a heavy toll of the flower of the land, it means a heavy load of taxes, it gives the opportunity for graft and is all wrong. Nations can settle disputes in an international court as well as private citizens and this we hope will all come from this great meeting. We do not believe it should be blocked but on the other hand that every good citizen should lend what assistance he can towards the accomplishment of the thing so greatly desired. That the American people are a queer lot often when it comes to elections is again proven by the results at Youngstown, Ohio, last Tuesday when a man named George Oles, a farmer who moved to that city three months ags> and ran for mayor on his own ticket, was elected. He carried on his campaign from a room in a hotel and advertised extensively, his platform announcing that he would discontinue street car service, use the streets for jitneys, jail anybody who paid taxes under a recent revaluation, permit “spooning" in the city parks under police protection, dismiss the police force and turn his salary over to charity. They elected him and now the real trouble begins. Remarkable indeed was the showing made by the democrats throughout the country in Tuesday's elections. Just a year ago the old party of Jefferson was so badly beaten that it was freely predicted art organization would be impossible but from that wreck came the fighting and millitant like those who have kept the party formidable for

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a century and in almost every sec-1 tion they won victories. In Kentucky, Maryland and Virginia they | took baat opntrol of the state legislatures and in New York state they gained hazily. In hundreds of cities they were swept into power again and since good candidates were necessary to accomplish this, the record written by them will M good. And they are not finished. Nctl November the people will say again what th|y think of normalcy and a conglfss which "fiddles while Rome burns.” The democrats have a right to smile. In the closing sentence of the fateful last bulletin issued by the republican candidates in the recent election the question was asked whether or not we would publish the statement of the city's financial condition after they took office. We have no desire to carry on the tight after the campaign is over but we do wish to say now after the smoke has cleared away that the implied accusation that we do not print the facts concerning the city or county are without any foundation. We have given you every item of information and it has been the absolute truth. We have frequently published the financial facts and we shall continue to do so, whoever is in office. The Daily Democrat is first a newspaper and our every effort is to give to the public the news as it happens. We do not make it, we print it and we state the truth. We believe the public recognizes that fact and we accept the answer given at the polls last Tuesday as partly an approval of the fact.

NO TIME TO FISH Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 10. —As a re- I suit cf the recent confeaence of agri- I -ultural extension workers and county I Agents held at Purdue agricultural expel iment station, a movement is on foot in several counties to hold seed schools for the benefit of farmers, teed dealers and ether persons intersted in the seed label law. which in he' future is to be rigidly enforced. The idea of the seed school will be primarily to instruct farmers in the selection of seeds so that they may rocure the best to be had for use on their properties. ...» FERD IS THANKFUL I am grateful to the voters of the city of Decatur for the generous support accorded me in the election on Tuesday. The result clearly substantiates the belief that the people of Decatur had every confidence in me, ind 1 shall strive to do everything in my power to make Decatur a bigger and better city, in away that shall merit a continuance of the confidence cf the people I thank you. F. A. PEOPLES. MR. KOCHER APPRECIATIVE. I certainly appreciate the support given me in Tuesday's election and Ihe honor of being selected to serve as a member of the council. Though the only one chosen from my ticket I feel I can co-operate with the members of the council and will do my best to serve the people of Decatur. Thank you very much. J. L. KOCHER. APPRECIATES SUPPORT I wish to thank the voters of the First ward for the excellent vote given me at the polls on Tuesday. I desire to especially thank the men and women who worked untiringly in my behalf. The councilman elected in my ward wdll have my enthusiastic support. C. E. BELL. DR. LEONHARDT SAYS External treatments seldom cure Piles. Nor do surgical operations. The cause is inside — bad circulation. The blood is stagnant, the veins flabby. The bowel walls are weak, the parts almost dead. To Quickly and safely rid yourself cf piles you must free the circulation —send a fresh current through the stagnant pools. Internal treatment is the one safe method. Ointments and chitting won t do it. \.T. S. Deonhardt, M. D.. specialist, si t at work some years ago to find a re;W internal remedy for piles. He succeeded. He named his prescription HEM-RQiD. and tried it in 100 cases before he was satisfied. Now HEMROID is sold by druggists everywhere under guarantee, it is a harmless tablet. easy to take, and can always be found at the Hotthouse Drug company and druggists everywhere, who will gladly refund the purchase price to any dissatisfied customer.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1921. ♦

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