Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 65, Decatur, Adams County, 17 March 1925 — Page 4
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Ixeegt Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H. Heller, Tree, and Gen. Mgr B. W. Katnpe. Vice-Prea. & Adv. Mgr A. R. Holthouso, Sec'y. A Bus. Mgr Entered at the Poßtofilce at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Ratss: Single copies.——. , r * cents One week, by carrier 10 cents One Year, by carrier fb.OO One month, by mail —_ M cents] Three Months, by mall — >l.oo| Six Mouths, by mall—- (176 One Year, by mall >3.00 One Year, at office— — >3.00 (Prices quoted are withn first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those sones.) Advertising Rates ‘ Made Known by Application. Foreign Representative Carperter A Company, IM Michigan Avenue. Chicago, OLD KENTUCKY:— Tile "dark and bloody ground" was. heard from in the senate Saturday when, in the course of debate, Sena tor Ernst asked the following quest io^: < I wish to know if mare be any way under the rules of the senate whereby I <an. without breaking those rules and without offending the senators about me, call a fellow member a willflu, malicious, wicked liar. , “Pandemonium immediately reigned." so we are told, as it usually docs under such circumstances. It was al first supposed that Senator Class, of Virginia, was the man whom the Kentuckian had in mind, as his rather surprising question came at tlie close of a speech by the Virgin ian. But it later appeared that Sen alor (.'oiizens, of Michigan, was th< man. for Ernst read a statement o Couzens witiili lie cited as ids provo cation. The question was finally withdrawn, and will not. we suppose appear in the Record. Os course tbt man who asked it knew perfectly well that lie coiiM make no suet chirge without violating the rules o' tlie senate. What he sought to do and did. was to make the charge by asking whether be would be permit ted to niak’e it. The really important question—which will no doubt be ans wired lieforc these words are read—is whether our old friend "pandemo nium" is to contoiiie to reign in Lh< senate, and if so, for how long Certainly a severe blow was struck by Senator Ernst at “senatorial court esy." There was once a very distinguished man — possibly Pitt —of r whom we used to read in our old readers, who in a heated debate ex pressed contempt for a fellow mem her who had shown that he could no be "severe" without being "unparlia mi litary.'' and said, in substance: “J will show gentlemai how to lie severe and paliamentary at the saipe time.” Whereupon h< proceeded, in the language of head line writers, to “flay” his foe. His ’ example and method were adopted wilii Kentucky modification by Sen a',or l^nst. —Indianapolis News. Hie Iterator Catholic High team ; left ioday for Chicago, carrying with s them the best wishes of this com miuiiit who will watch their pro gn with kirn interest. We lie ' licve they have a chance to make a ’ wonderful showing and to bring fame I to th dr home town. The it.iih ? 1’111" rat lia.s arranged to gel tlie result ■ of each game in which the I H’l eugage. play by play, for pub- e I ihi in the issues of Friday and t Saturday. The boys feel that the t pahie driwn by them with Peoria, last :' < hamps, is a good tiling for they' will’have an opportunity to do their * . le ' while they are fresh ami if lht?y 1 win that < ie . look out for them to go * to the finals. 1 — —— , Just to show they were not kidding the President, the senate again turn- ' : dn.' i the appointment of Chark , ‘ '!. .V 11 ii attorney general. It i air. ■■ the ' nate is not with the , T. leu:, a very serious tiling be- ' cans'.' it means two to four years | more of <ii cord and trouble. With , th' Semite out of gear with Mr. Dawes 1 .i■ i ab; ilutely contrary Io Mr. Cool i Ige. with feelings so bitter that ■ ' o;J' bate been frequently echaUc,ed among- members of the 1
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Solution Os Yesterday’s Puzzle XF ■ Rt/rT jOffr: MD a »M T-jNlgSl l Q ■si* M r ■°R£,i ‘r ! N J T I s MpIoM e ’*■ TM-jgfft, jßl2j*^ c tStfidTji k!»Mai ■<MFrl’’lsl< i*!«BA“«lT •' Xd|£( AjjAtT c LJUj p ' - T £M*feWli i -' Nls £jßffi IB t’-.A sHn J.. Flu EM'-dyi:—'wi -j R- cjIB_ A .c-1-1- mß* U-M- T '- °M’- l '-i A i c> - trnE'A-r!sM3!-->.| ? ugust senate, what < an we expect in he way of real going forward? Tile new Wright law which is sup><>sed to make it harder to hud a drink vill of course depend upon its enprcemenl and die manner in which ts meaning is determined by various jfficials and courts over the state. In Hie rural coinmuuities where the eutiment is decidedly opposed to the iquor traffic their will be a tightenng up no doubt while in the larger ities the officers will probably wink heir same wink. Politics in this section seems to >e a little slow in opening up. but ve feel very confident that by the ime election day rolls around there will be sufficient contest to make hings interesting. The question of refecting local officers is a more important one than it seems and it should be the duty of every good citizen to lake a part in it and to serve in any way called upon. • tovernor Al Smith, of New York, is a fellow who sees things and does them. Just now he is advocating a s3<Mi,mm.iWo campaign to remove all grade crossings in the state within i few years. At the rati' they have been moving along this line, the governor says'it will take 270 years to complete the job and by that time most of us won’t need it. The new gasoline law will, it is estimated, cause more than ten million dollars a year for highway improvements and maintenance, which ought to make a very decent showing in ray a matter of five years. o ) Big Features Os ) RADIO ) Programs Today ) TtfesDAY’S Five "best radio p FEATURES *!<h|£yrlgi]t 1926 by United Press) "IffZ New York, 4643 M. WGY. Sjchtiiectady, 379.5 JI, KYW, Chicago I I »r ■ & .
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1925.
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535.4 M. WBZ. Springfield. 333.1 M. WW. Washington, 463.6 M. KDKA. East Pittsburgh, 34(91 M, 9 p.w (ESTi Urawttwick music memory < outest. MEAF. New York. 491.5 M. WEEI. Boston, 175-9 M. WCCO, Minneapolis, St Paul. 416.4 M. WOC Davenport. 483.6 M. WEAR. Cleveland. 389.4 M. WWJ. Detroit. 3527 M. WCAK. Pittsburgh. 461.3 M. WJAIi. Providence. 305.9 M. WFI. Philadelphia. 394.5 M. WSAI. Cincinnati, 325.9 M, o p.m. (EST) —Everready entertainers in I rish programs. KSD, St. Louis, 545.1 M. 9 pm (CUT) Special Dish program KGO. Oaklaud, 360,5 M. 8 p.tn (PCST) —Special Irish concert. WOAVV. Omaha. 536 M. 9 p. in. (CST) —St. Patrick's day concert. New Hoe For World Service New Hope For World Service dials. written while listening to Dr. L.C. Bently speak on above theme) We've reached the liottom of giving the end! If we move at all, we must, now ascend. We've cut off big overhead expense A very good sign of returning sense. We've arranged to pay our debts,and are paying. So, a solid foundation for future, laying. We've pased up the hauded-dowu programs Adopting "suggestions" We've fewer “I ain's." We are hearing Hie notes of new. harmony,--The brotherhood hymn that makes men free. Ami the whole church, at last is wakening up. To the meaning of drinking, with Christ. His cup. Thus confidence is restored once more, And WORLD SERVICE faces au -.open door. A. D. Burkett. — —o — »o«eoooo*oooo« • TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY • • Prom th* Dally Democrat fllea ♦ 0 . " ■ 1 • • to year* ago thia day • •••••••••••••• March 17 —M. E. conference will I conveue at Portland April 15. i Marriage license — Edward Reed ' and Mary L. Bucher. | J. Q. Nepttmc. pioneer of this section. died at Willshire last evening. I Miss Alemia Winter entertains k the U. B. club. Clover Leaf bat; out ucn time card with four passenger trains each way. Hou. B- F. Shiveley of South Bend attended to business in court here. Dan Donovan is celebrating St. 3 Patrick's day at Fort Wayne.
I* A. Holthouse is still in serious condition with lung fever. _ Appellate court holds that rcmon strance signatures on typewriter arc good if maker holds power of attorney ■' ■ oMan And Wfie Should Not Work In Same Office How do mutters work out when u wife works in her husnund’s office—or a husband works in a business owned or run by his wife? llreuila ttelaml. writing in this week's liberty, says her investigations indicate that it doesn't work. As an example of what happens, she quotes a wornsn editor who found such a situation impossible to endure. "For years before J married I had been working on the niagaatoe,'* the editor states. 'I had worked up to a useful and important member of the ataff. Then I married the editor and something stranger happened. The people in the office no longer would give me credit for any hard worfcr I sould sense a feeling floating around the office that I. being married to lite boss, had everything soft. “Another thing, a married couple in an oflice constitutes a sort of a clique, hated by those inside and outside of it. Probably they thought we went home and compared notes and plotted changes. Hut. whatever it was the drawbacks to working in my own husband's office were enough so that I gave up being an editor ami took to making a living elsewhere.' “And a story almost identical with this can be told of a New York woman who owns a fashionable dressmaking house,” continues Miss Veland “She married a handsome man who gave up an insignificant position tc work for -her. He quickly became | tyrannical to his wife's employees, and of course fretting and soreness among her employes made it much , harder for the wife. This and other subsequent difficulties brought about by the situation jed to a divorce. “So you see tlie situation is probably to blame rather than one se> or the other.” o CARD OF THANKS We wish in tliis manner to express our thanks for the sympathy and kindness shown us by our friends and neighbors during the sickness and death of our infant son. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Spangler o — WILL YOU PAINT FOR ME A PICTURE Will you paint for me a picture (Mi artist, that will ease And soothe my restless feeling Life will seem as it use to be. in a garden full of flowers That will really look like life And the fruits and all the roses Will resemble paradise. On it paint the golden sunset As it sinks low in the west And a maiden staudiug watching Who now is gone to rest. If you can but paint this picture So she really walks and speaks Then life will seem as it use to And this picture will be compote. Where she is gathering lovely roset An her face the sweetest smile And around her dance the sun beams Oh my Angel darling child. Where she is singing in the evening Stars are shining over head And the song that she is singing Is the sweetest ever beard. Her hair. 1 forgot to tell you Must hang ia the finest waves You must use the choicest brushes Yes, the best you sure hiust save For this picture must lie the finest And the loveliest in the lamb Oh artist can you paint it Yes paint it fine and grand. —By Mary M. Boyd. o No Changes Made In Fish And Game Laws ’ Indianapolis. March 17. — (Special) —The legislature just adjourned did not make a single iliangc in the fish and game laws, nor in those protecting birds or fur-bearing animals, it was pointed out today by state conservation officials, the fish and game division of which department is be seiged with letters from all over the state by persons wanting to know when it is legal to bunt. this, kind of an animal or angle for a certain speeci of fish. ( The General Assembly did, however, pass one act relating to bunting and 1 fishing, namely one which calls for k issuing ’ permits to honorably dis ► charged soldiers, sailors and marines whereby they are permitted to hunt and fish without taking out a license.. Persons entitled to this privilege, I however, will not receive permits until the acts are printed, distributed I and declared laws by a proclamation by Governor Jackson, which likely will be in early June. I When applying for the .permit, per t »sous entitled to same, are required to present their official I papers to the clerk of the county . wherein they expect to make Use of I the permit. In Marion county, permits will be issued from the office! of . the tich and game division of the conservation department, located at 124 * *
s' Statehouse. This act says that only persons who actually served in wiirs 1 'and who are residents of Indiana are e eligible to the free permits. y < Sheep In Demand On Indiana Farms Today Uuiianapolis, March 17. — (United u Pless.)-- Slieep are in demand on the farms in ludiuna today. The demand is so great that ewes arc selling at from sls Xo s2u <i head R in many places. Three or four years • ago the same kind of sheep could • '.Hive been bought at from one fourth to one-third the price farmers are 1 willing to poy now. Tlie demand is caused by the rise • iu wool prices and lamb prices have 2 been well above tiiose of most ail i other agricultural products for more ’ than two years. 1 Many in close touch with the situ- • ation piediid still further advances in I he price of wool. I The United States consumes about I one-fourth of the world’s wool pro- > duction and produces only one-third. Wool prices iu this country are most . .likely to remain well ajiove tlie world i vool prices as a result of the protective tariff. Statistics show domestic production well under the pre war basis. From 11112 to 1922 tlie number of sheep in the United States decreased from 51 million to 39 million. The most recent information from .’oreign countries shows that in none rs the important sheep producing countries have there been extensive Deceases in production thus far. although a general tendency toward expansion exists. Conservative students of the situation point out that a general shift rom beef cattle raising to in the west because of the prevailing low prices or cattle or a general increase in sheep production in the northwest in n effort to diversify the agriculture might have a depresskming affect im ae next two years. What will lie done in this coauecion time only will tel J. Those in‘erested in sheep will watch developnents closely. It is also pointed out that an un--isually large cotton crop which would result in decidedly cheaper Cotton abrics and that a period of general unemployment would be decidedly >earish factors. Lebanon. — Boone county is to ship fifty Wisconsin dairy cows for Roone county farmers iu a campaign or better dairying. o CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our many friends md relatives for the kindness and ■.ympathy shown during the sickness mil death of our beloved mother; ilso for the beautiful floral offerings md the pastor for his kind and conoling words. Mr. and Mrs. John Myers Mr. and Mrs \V. P. Merriman Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Merriman o City Championship Net Gaine it H. S. Gym tonight, 8:15.
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