Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 133, Decatur, Adams County, 5 June 1925 — Page 5
I MUNYON’S PAW PAW PILLS for Constipation O*» not K-our, grip. nr X? i'hjijtßwh weaken, but atimulate f,.'": { Ji»er to normal activity, 3T ,J "linn Correcting eonatlF pa* l ®" in a natural way. Munjan'a Paw P lw Taaia makea ,ki wall, katy* l<a "Then i» Hop*” , * un *- ; | S a titfartion guarantttd or money refund'd — I Blames Older Generation Edr The Immoral Youths i West Baden, Ind., —(United Press)' H In discussing "The American Home I am! World Peace,” in her annual add || dress to the) Council ol the General \ ■ Federation of Women's Clubs, Mrs. I John D. Sherman of Estes Park Colo., referred to the morals of the nation's Jt youth. 8 The address was one of the high lights of the Council session and was delivered last night, She said: "When we think of war and the ' Home we are apt to think of the imI mediate effect only —we ail remember about that. Rut war does some--3 thing to the Home that is not obvious a i or even apparent at first. •ft is impossible to hand out medals for skill in breaking one commandment and keep the other nine intact. The mental unrest, the rebellion a gainst rstrictiofns, reasonable and uniV veisal in dealing with young people Hie difficultp in setting down to a life of normal employments and enpoyments, the waywardness of hoys and ' f the wilfulness of girls, are symptoms of a moral shell-shock more far reaching in its effects than we can any of us know. We are not asking these young people to go bftek. In the very ‘ nature of things we know none of us I can never go back. But we are asking | them to go bn, and to go on in an orderly, straightforward manner. We are asking them not to balk, not to back up. not to sidestep; it may not * be pleasant or easy, but there is no other way to advance than by going * forward. "This is a big Ihing we are asking our young people; meantime, we criticize and make all sorts of charges against the youth of the land. I wonder sometimes why they don't rise up and f demand an accounting oft the older generation. And I also wonder why we ourselves so seldom pause to sum up some of our own offenses. Don't think for a moment our young folks are all blind to the deplorable state of their own affairs. They admit that the morals of ttie young people of today are on the down grade. Where does the responsibility lie? The youthful editors of a college paper tell us. and the teiling places tfift respoflsibi lity where it belongs—at the door of the older generation. They say; “VClio runs the resorts where the shameless parties take place? Who is in charge of the booze smugglers who get into this country the liciuor which graces the hip-pockets of the modern youth? Who controls the Indecent amusement and publication of obscene literature? Who writes the books and stories depicting life so lurily that upon reading them the younger generation goes out of its way to imitate their voices Why, it is the older generation. If we are going to condemn, let us get down to fundamental causes." "In short, present conditions mean no less than this: The American people need all the wisdom, all the perseverance all the loyalty that "• hai inherited from the makers ol the lie public, if that Rpubllc is not to perish from earth. / “Our home Siirtey Is Already bringing our facts that reveal the possibi ~ ity of conditions which may be of little "to our credit as a people. ■ vertheless to better the Annin an Hom we must have the Tacts ■ —o- —’ Mrs. Cunningham Indicted For Poisoning Relatives Gary. Ind., June 6-Mrs. Anna Cunningham. “poison widow of Gary. '< day was indicted by the Lake coun y grand jury on the charge of k Hing three of her children with poison, rhe woman some time ago confesses the murders. t Police charge that she killed her husband and four children, bit. indictments charge her with the dea' i of three of the children, Isabelle. Charles, 19; and Walter. 10Tipton. — Robert Jeorges, Serving a sentence for stealing scissors and shears, has written that the prison at Michigan City is better than the German army. Tipton. -r- Three mouths ago. Randolph Soudder, 4. fell from a wood pile and fractured his arm. This week he fell while pushing his little sister s go-cart and broke the arm again.
Manure Pife Quite Costly to Farmers ’ -— - Teste Extending Over Twen- ; ty-One Years in Ohio. , Every ton of manure allowed to ar-' : farm U e-Vt" r ° Und tbe roMs ,he ob amed / en,# - Thlß aßurfi hM bwn ,obta ned from actual field tests extending over 21 years In Ohio. ' Realizing that crop yields tell a 'story much easier to understand than a chemical analysis, the Ohio experiment station has applied manure to clover sod in the three-year rotation i corn, wheat and clover for twenty-1 i .one years. I One series of plots received manure I directly from the stalls. Another iserfes was treated with an equal I ffveight of manure that had been left ’ .in a pile In the yards for three months. . Stable manure produced 23 bushels of 1 .'.corn an acre, 10.5 bushels of wheat > I and 1,363 pounds of hay. Barnyard 1 manure yielded at the rate of 19.5 'bushels of corn, 9 bushels of wheat I and 840 pounds of hay. Measured by the average value of crop Increase. ■ one ton of yard manure Is worth $2.92 • and one ton of stable manure $3.45. i The idea exists In some sections' that a considerable portion of the manure hauled during the winter Is wasted. Missouri tests prove this Idea unfounded except In tbe case of steep hillsides where the water from melting snows may carry away the ma ! nure. L. E. (’all of the Kansas Agricultural college, in a recent statement, says: “Barnyard manure can safely he ’ scattered on most fields when the I ground Is covered with snow. It Is i only when the snow melts rapidly on rolling fields that very much of the ( fertilizing value of manure Is lost. . Under most conditions the loss will be greater when the manure is piled outdoors than when It Is scattered. Put Additional Weight on Poultry for Market Comparatively little attention has been given to the matter either of placing additional weight on market •poultry or of Improving Its quality be- . fore marketing, say the specialists at the New Jersey .agricultural experl- 1 .ment station. Recent experiments at that institution show that nearly one-1 half pound, can be placed on heavy roasters in ten days through the use of semi solid buttermilk with a mash high in corn meal content. In this method the roasters are con fined to the colony bouses, starved for 24 hours, and then subjected to a tenday special feeding process. During this time an attempt is made to re'duce exercise to a minimum. Perches «nd dropping platforms are removed from the houses, and curtains are' •dosed—except while the birds are actually feedifig. No drinking water Is supplied during the period. The following ration Is used : Corn meal, seven pounds; wheat middlings, three pounds; wheat bran, one pound; setnlsoiid buttermilk (diluted one to seven) ' ,22 pounds. This ration is fed as a wet mash, .three times dally—at 7:30 a. in., noon, I and 4p. m. Half as much of the mix- j ture Is given at noon as in either the ■morning or the night feeding. On this ration roasters have averaged 7.7 per cent, or .44 pounds Increase In weight per bird. Purposes of Windbreaks Windbreaks about buildings have a twin purpose, they provide shelter and gather moisture for the garden. Trees and shrubs are essential to the making of a real farm home, aS they increase the value of the property and make conditions more pleasant and healthful. There is scant comfort in a house or barnyard exposed to the chilling winds and drifting snows o’ winter and the withering blasts of a hot dry day in summer. bbm Break land as early aS possible. ♦ * • Purchase fertilizers before planting time. » • • > Procure legume seed for summer planting. ... ■ Mixing of fertilizers Is also like charity; it should at home. * ♦ ♦ It pays to treat the seed oats for smut. Are you planning to do it? I* * * A soil without legumes is as “unfulfilled" as an orchard without bees. * • • The county farm agent Is your farm “trouble shooter." Tell him what to alm At on your farm. * « • ’ Wouldn't you encourage a boy to spend his spare time in the development of a lamb, 4 pig or a calf? * • ♦ (t takes manure to make good potatoes, go don’t forget the potato patch )when you are cleaning the Stables. f • ♦ • ts one horse carries his head too high or drives more freely than his inete, adjusting the coupling reins will make a difference. Every producer should remember that quality counts and is paid for in the market's final analysis. Sooner or later the consumer pays for quality and some seller gets the quality price. This hint ought to make money for the farmer who will set it to going on his place. -- I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, JUNE S, 1925.
111 ■ ■ 11 '■ ■ f • , , ■<# -•« ''«Jl.r' t'JT >—nfsw yj Wife ■**« / / JOE P. CANTY Elgin. 111.—This picture shpwa Jpe I’ Canty of Elgin, mid shipman at the I’nited States naval academy. ('anty is one of 100 candidates ap pointed from enlisted personnel. Canty and William F. Bryson of Pana, 111. are two Illinois appointees. Canty graduated from Elgin High school with the class of 1924 with high honors. He resides with his mother, Mrs. Patrick T. canty, at 364 Hastings street, Elgin. MIRAI CHMES Decatur Circuit There will he no preaching service al Beulah on the morning of June 7. The pastor will preach at Washington in the morning instead of in the evening on that date. Children's Day service at Beulah on Sunday evening. June 7; at Mount Pleasant on the evening of June 14. Lester L. C. Wisner, pastor —o Pleasant Mills and Salem Sunday School, 9:30 Morning Worship at Pleasant Mills. 10:30, Epworth League, 7:00. Evening worship at Salem, 7:30. Prayer meeting at Salem Wednesday 7:30. Prayer meeting at Pleasant Mills. Thursday 7:30 The pulpit at each appointment, will be filled by Bro. Lowell Smith, who goes to DePauw University Monday to enter the summer school. Children s Day will be observed Sunday.evening, June 14, at Pleasant Mills and June 21. at Salem. At each service there will be an opportunity for baptism of children. Why not start our children right? This is an obligation to our children. 1 The Epworth League installed the following officers Sunday evening: President. Gladys Crownover; first vice president. Ralph Smith: second vice president, Lavina Ehrsam; third vice president, Mary Teeple; fourth [vice president, Lblah Steele; kecre- | tary-treasurer, Harry Crownover; pianist. Midge Davis; assistant pianI ist. Oral Steele. Lets back these ■ elected officers with our unreserved support anti help the League have the best year - yet. You need the church and the church needs you. Why not get to-
Don’t Sutler From The Extreme Hot Weather © Come In and let us z ft fit you in a hew - \ Palm Beach : v Suit tk Cool and Comfortable these hbt days and IZJf evenings. New fabrics in the new shades, tailored to the latest stylfes. $12 tO JSIB $7.50 antl $9.50 * I NEW STRAW MATS I I COtiL UNDERWEAR I $2 $5 II 30c $3.00 I - - -1 ■- Vance & Linn . I 1 1 | llllll»l 11 Hl’
gether and help each h A. Shipley. Z- —O''-' — Antioch Church William Hygema, Pastor. Suhdiy Scheol—i:bo. Devotion Service—l6:ls. Evangelist c Service—7:3o ricv J. A. ReeX' from Jet, Okla., ' has been with us this week, ills 1 ;oul-stlrrlng, effectual messages have 1 io uncertain sound. There will be services each eve- ' nlng ot' the following week. You are ' invited to attend. — o—— Calvary Evangelical Church hev. R. W. Loose, Pastor Sunday School at 9:30 a m. Afternoon preaching sefvlce at 2:30 p.m. sun time.j o : 1 “SWIMMIN’ HOLES” POPULAR PLACES » "a ~ L 1 . (Continued from Page One) private swimming pool. Several of Mr. Schurger'a friends have been assisting , him this spring in making the pool , one of the best natural ones in this , bast of the state. Other favorite “watering” places include a sand-pit about four miles west of Berne, which was controlled last year by the Berne Athletice club. This year the club has not as yet been organized and the pool there is open to the public. There is a stone quarry near Geneva where many people in the , southern part of the county have beeii taking advantag of its cool waters. < o— Club Women Divided Over Reform Os Marriage Law West Baden. Ind., June s—Delegates to the biennial council of the General Federation of Women's clubs were divided today over the federation's ■ program for reform of mariage and divorce laws. A resolution covering the program ' was sent back to the resolutions committee for redrifting In an effort (d 1 conciliate the divergent views. ' One group, held by Mrs. Edward Franklin White ot Indianapolis, demanded a continuance of the federa tion's tight for a constitutional amend1 ment providing uniform marriage and divorce laws. ( “We have already been at work tor two years for a federal amendment ’ and V Is no time to lay down on the job.’''said Mrs. White. Another group recommended a program for constitutional education preI paratory to renewal of the campaign I for constitutional amendment at a la*T er date. Resolutions on subjects from the . abolition of beauty contests to the communist movement iii America e were ready for discussion at the sesjlsion today. e | Uhlld labor, control of floods find I waterways, and maternity and infahey B ' laws were scheduled for discussion. the resolution on commission prom-
:aes "cooperation to the ut&ojl" by the federitlon Id corhbittlng fed pro paganda in the United States. ( Indorsement of the Hardinfc-Hughes plan for a court of international justice is contained In another resolution. - o-— MARtINSVILtE -Lon Vandevonfer ot Goldsmith Is claiming fame with a telephone fish. It'S formed like a tad pole with gofcular body and a tale eiteriillng to a point. Vandeventer obtained It from Martinsville hatcheries for His aquarium BRAZIL— First came frost, tti-n a •hies Fred Tlefol Brazil farmer, re ports twenty-five chickens of frying size missing. feLWOOD— Nicholas Mosalem, E’ wood grocer, wrecked a big display window after two attempts He stepped oh the starter and his auto In gear weht up on the sidewalk and (topped Trylnfc to back it off. Mesa lam again shifted the gears wrong and the machine continued across the walk into the window. COLUMBUS—Work on the new Home for the Columbus Evening Re publican to cost $50,060 has been started to regain Strength —bfihgs joy to you and your friends. IT VERY man, woman and child IL wants to have strength and correct weifeht. It means the joy of living. To be minus strength and underweight , often proves low fightingpower In the body. It often means you are minus nerve-power, minus red cells in your blood, minus health, minus vitality. ' It is serious to be minus, but the moment you increase the number of your red-blood-cells, you begin to become plus. That's why S.S.S., since 1826, has meant to thousands of underweight men and women a plus in their strength. Your body fills to the point of power, your : flesh becomes firmer, the age lines that eome from thinness disappear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel it, too, all over your body. More red-blood-cells 1 S.S.S. aid? Nature .in building them by the million! There are no unproven theories about S.S.S., the scientific results of each of its purely vegetable medicinal ingredients are admitted by authorities. Begin taking S.S.S today. It will give you more energy, vitality and vigor and a more up and going appearance. * 8 3. 8. <• sold at all good dm" store* in two ilin. The larger site is more economical. OWnIC. € Yo ; ; Fed Yourself Again
Indianapolis. — Islvar Hanszke, who halls from Lake county, wants to change his name to Stephen. State officials with whom he filed notice of the change wondered why he didn't get a hew last name while be was at It. ELWOOD-W. C. Wolf, superintendent of the Richmond division of the Feunayjyania railroad, saved thp
IF YOU do not add something to your bank account today, the day is lost and will not be of any help to you tomorrow. • ALSO maintaining a bank account t< nds to prevent you getting into debt. It helps you mentally and morally. Come in and start a checking account. THE PEOPLES LOAN & TROST CO. ■ Bank of Service ■MMmaMamMmmwKVNMMMMwmwwEßMaNMaoaMnnr Red Crown The High-Grade Gasoline Is Masterful The main function of a gasoline is to provide pull— and Red Crown provides it to a superlative degree. Red Crown negotiates the steepest hills with an ease which exhilarates you by its sure mastery of the situation. Red Crown is swift to take you out of an emergency- rapidly responsive at a change of traffic lights—marvelously flexible in carrying you through a traffic jam. Red Crown power pull is as strong as modem chemical science can devise. It flows'unceasingly— never lapses —never varies— because it is inherent in the nature of the Red Crown unbroken chain of boiling point fractions. To increase driving satisfaction — to avoid disappointments—and to add mileage per gallon—fill up with Red Crown and use Red Crown all the time. Al the Mowing Standard Oil Service Station: ! Comer Mercer and Winchester Sts. | And at the following Filling Stations and Garages: A. W. Tnnvsn, ?’*> . Il TkSyXUZ | 1 Th. «rr A Tire Sho*. *. I I LI 1 ond St. , Zt / Smith'. Service Sta*t»n. S ISth S' yak-JS. Sdnma County Soto Co.. 232 W. Madt.cn V<fV I Auto Klectrle Cf». South 13th St. S. S H. * H. Anto Sale. • H. fforth, Preble Sam Mealey, Monmouth, IneStandard Oil Company Decatur, Ind i (Ir.diana) 4004' ! > iiiiiiirri i
life of Mrs J E Plcken, Elwood woman, She became confused while crossing the tracks. A fast train was approaching. Wolf ran to her and carried her off the track. BLUFFTON—Roger Good of BriL hh Columbia, who is visiting at his sister Mrs. Guy Meyers at Bluffton Is regaling local youths with stories of lie caugh’ an octopus.
