Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1925 — Page 4
r— ——■ 111 ■■■" DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H. Heller. Pree. and Gen. Mgr. ▲. R. Uolthouse, Sec'y & Qua. Mgr Entered at the Poetoffice at Decatui. Indiana, ax second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single copiesl cent* One week, by carrierlo cents One Year, by carriero6.oo One month, by mailß6 cents Three months, by mail »|IOO Six months, by mallßl 76 One year, by mallß3 00 One year, at officeß3.oo (Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those sones.) Advertising Rales Made Known by Application. Foreign Representative Carpentier A Company, 123 Michigan Avenue, Chicago. THIS IS TRUTH:— Hon. Albert J. Beveridge in a recent speech this sound advice amrTecapitulation of facts which is honest to goodness stuff worth thinking about: — "If no American legislative body could meet and pass laws lor the next ten years, the United States would fairly leap forward in material achievement and our people enjoy a .comparative paradise of ordered liberty. “The swarms of American public offii ials outnumber those of any other country line out of every eleven of our adult wage earning population is a government employee, and the agents of government boards, bureaus ! and commissions treat business firms. ' corporations and ndividuals as sus- 1 • peeled criminals. "Expenses of government has swollen to dropsical bulk, and administra- 1 tion of government has become so 1 intricate and involved that nobody can comprehend its workings. For instance when Lincoln became Presillent there were all told fewer than ■ one public official for every 800 adult citizens. Today according to the 1 careful report of the National Indus 1 * . 'trial Conference Board, recently ■ issued, there is one government em ' ploye for every eleven persons over 1 16 years of age. The salaries alone 1 of these millions of public employes is $.3.800,000,000 a year. "Men and women engaged in bus ; inc-s. the soul of which is uprighteous me are goose-stepped by government Full ergiants. who themselves could not ne<-e-sfullv direct any one ol tin my rid forms of productive .ndustry. "And while this frenzy goes ou of ' making business toe the mark drawn 1 iy bureaucrats who know nothing of 1 busim ss and could not run any big (om ern while this craze for com pi Hing artificial business ethics pro ni ii , corruption, riots, tlyoughout off > ialdom itself.” I Dayton, Tennesee, can arrange 1 the weather next month when the 1 famous evolution test case comes up , and the little town can take care ol ’ Hie people, the rush will probably- I equal those to gold mine camps oi ( new nd territories. Thousands art I i.« inc to go to that section and > . while tfie great contest is on. The case is one against a school t ac’.ier. John T. Scopes who disre ( Hug a law enacted by the recent ; 1 evolution in the i Im.'ton high school. He was arrested and immediately, William Jen iiing". Bryan offered his services to a .st in I tie prosecution while the Aineii an Civil Liberties union of Ne v York has arranged for Clarence | Darrow, the famous Chicago criminal: h> . , vim defended Loeb and Leopold, <nd Bainbridge Colby, ex-secre-tary of stat’ 1 . New York City, to de fend Scopes. Other famous men will take part in the contest and Charles Evans Hughes is to assist in appeal ing the cause to the supreme court. No case in years has attracted sO mm li general attent'on and it will probably become history no difference [ w hat the result for the cause of iCjorty of worship and of opinion in this nation is a sacred while this may appear to you a trival mat-
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I " I ter. it is of vita) importance as a ( basic principal in America. Dayton. ' Tenn , a town of 1.700 population and 1 John Scopes, an unheard of country school teacher, both bid lair to become quite famous. The democratic national committee has raised the money ami paM off the last penny of indebtednes ou the last campaign and that’s something for * party generally advertised as dead and buried, it is more than possible that during the next few months the old party of Jackson and Jefferson will be reorganized on a tinner basis than it has been for thirty years, for the people generally are not enthusiastic over the plans and specifications now being used by the party in power. There will always"bc politics in this country unless we change the plan which doesn’t seem desirable or possilde. A very delightful brand of cool weather arrived during the night and onttnued over today. The general drought over the country was not btoken it seems except for local showers and predictions ate that there will be no rain for several days. In tin county however the showers- of tlie past two or three days helped out exceedingly and the average farmer bel eves that if general rains are not oo far postponed the crops will be saved. Lets hope so. The Indiana Demoerat’c Editorial Association will meet at Terra Haute June 25th and 26th and a program of pleasure and business and politics has been mapped out by John C. Gor'man of Princeton, president of this old-time and worth-while organization. Plans for next years campaign will be discussed and speeches will be yiade by Hon. Walter Meyers. demoTat c candidate for mayor of Indianapolis and Congressman Greenwood. Mexican made whiskey is selling in Kansas for eighteen dollars per quart and the regular white mule brings fifteen, information given out .or the benefit of those bootleggers who are seeking a field where they can make larger profits. However they should also consider that Kansas is really prosecuting those who ingage in the liquor traff’c illicitly after playing horse with them for forty-five years.
' — O' I Big Features Os / RADIO j Programs Today <
Wednesday's Five,Radio Features WEAK. Ne wYork, 1" p in. i F.DST)--George Larierc's little symphony. WCAP. Wasbiugton: WOO, Fhiladel phia; WJAR, Providence; WEAF. New York, 7 p.m. (ESTI —U. N. Navy hand Wt’Al’, W Hshington ,8 p.m. <ENT) Dedication of the new organ at Washington auditorium. x WSAI. Cincinnati, 10 p.m. (CDST) WSAf string quartet. YOA, Denver, 8:10 p.m. (MBT) — Comic opera “The Captain of Plinouth — o
♦ ♦ ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ g ——— F ♦ From the Daily Democrat file • ♦ Twenty years ago this day ♦ + 444444|4444»4 +
June I(H—La»t day of court until first Monday in September. ’"Singer Bros, elevator at Dixon, 0.. destroyed by fire with loss of 812.000 Geneva is planning a big celebration for July 4. | burglars attempt to gain entrance .to True’s store but are frightened a ay by neighbor -who screams. ! Five cents a yarn for the best cali--4
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1925
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FAME i
Fame is the fragrance, not the raise The beauty, not the thing: To >vcar the crown of her rcuuwu First one must be a king. Fame follows service truly done. She never takes the lead. Who would be great in her estate Must first supply the deed
(Copyright l!'2o Edgar A. (fues^ - ~
co at the Boston store. Big turkey dinner at the J. K. Tunibleson farm. Miss Ada Murray celebrates her sixteenth birthday. Miss Arbye Ixh-Ii entertains for her guest. Miss Hclt'worth of Celina Ohio. Joe Brutuiegraff has a runaway and scatters milk cans along street for several blocks. o American Fatally Injured In Accident In Paris Paris. June 10 —(United Press) — General William Chamberlains, an officer of the American Expeditionary 1 Forces during the war, was fatally injured in a crash between his taxicab and a tram car in the Latin quartl er here late last night. Taken to a hospital, he died a few minutes later without recovering consciousness.
__p_ Grey Haired Woman To Be Graduated At Northwestern Evanston. 11l , June 10. — (Unittd Press)— When the senior class at Northwestern University ascends the rostrum Monday to receive diplomas at the formal commencement ceremonies. a placid grey haired woman of perhaps fifty will have a place in the line of vivacious young coeds. i Mn. A. It. McDonald®will receive an M. A. degree in theology as re- ► ward for two years work in the graduate school. Her other accom5 plisbment during that two years of I college will not be recognized by the ► academic world but they are as im- ► pressive. ’ Mrs. McDonald’s work has ineludij ed beside the usual curriruliffm for a theologian, doing all the cooking for her family, the weekly washing 0 and ironing, tending to miscellaneous i- duties of the mother of a five-child family. e is the eecret of it all, Mrs. d McDonald told the United Press today. That was her only formula for 1- accomplishing two full sized jobs at
t Fame is tlie ultimate reward To grace the sturdy soul Who hopes to elaini one smile from fame Must paxs beyond his goal Man cannot work for fame alone. Nor violate her plan. Who seeks to wear her laurels fair Must prove himself a man.
one time. "System is absolutely, necessary both on the campus and in the kitch en.” said Mrs. McDonald. "1 have often found it entirely impossible to attend to both school and house at otice. Some of my weightiest problems have been solved while the weekly washing littered up the kitchen and 1 was attacking it witli a flat iron. By propping a book at the end of the hoard I found it easy to accomplish both operations. "1 do my own cooking, clean'ng ami washing. My family haven't missed a meql even during final examin ations.” Then Mrs.''McDonald hurried away to attend to pre-coiiimencement duties. 0 \
Way Have To Remodel Engines In Big Dirigible Washington, June 10. — (United Frees.)—Five of the famous Maybach engines. pride of Germany's mechanical industry, may have to be remodeled to make the huge dirig ble Los Angeles, in which they were in stalled, available tor practical flights, it was unofficially reported today. The breakdown of the engines on the Los Angeles’ flight to Minnesota which caused its abandonment after Cleveland had been reached, will not deprive .the north and tuiddlewest of a sight qf an air leviathan, however. The helium gaa in the Los Angeles is being transferred to the Shenandoah, whigh will fly early in July to Minneapolis and St. Paul over the original route, probably returning by way of St. Joseph, Kansas City and St. Loujs, early in July. , ——o—.TIPTON — Mrs.. Rossini Waugh Stewart, of New York, former Tipton girl, is the doner of a gold medal to the Joseph Academy at Tipton in memory of her husband, comedian and singer. The medal will be award) ed to the winner in the elocutionary class.
TIME TO KILL POULTRY LICE I I
County Agent Giveb Methods Eor Treating Poultry For Lice By the County Agent. ’ Right now is a good time to be thinking about getting rid of the Hee which may have been developing in the poultry Huck during the close contlnement of the long winter months While it may be hoped that most fiocks were treated in the fall before going into winter quarters, yet undoubtedly many were not, and may be liberally infected at this lime. “To prevent loss and irritation (luring the summer.” accordiugto C. 11. Cleveland of tbe Entomology Department of Purdue Agricultural Experiment Station, ‘‘it is well to take advantage of Hie warm days of spring to dip the birds, since this lias prov- j en the most completely effective method of control for lice.” Prepare the dip by thoroughly mixing sodium fluoride in lukewarm watir at the rate of one ounce of the powder to one gallon of water. A galvanized iron tub holding about light gallons of dip is a convenient' eceptacle. All birds, including males, ihould be treated, in dipping with >ne hand hold bird with wings over the back the other hand to 'told the legs lint 1 tbe bird is com iletely immersed witli the exception >f"*the head. The hold on the legs may now be released and the -hand used to ruffle the feathers to enable the dip to penetrate. Then grasp the head and beak so that the finger and thumb close the nostrils, and duck the head. Lilt the bird from tlie dip. allow to drain for a few secmils, squeezing excess liquid from tlie feathers, then release. Keep the dip agitated to maintain suspension >f the fluoride in the water. Dip only m warm days, and stop in time to illow all birds to dry before going io roost. When iq-ns are used for hatching eggs, it is important to keep them ree from lice, since young chicks frequently suffer severe injury from contact witli a lousy mother. Setting lens must not be dipped of course, but should be treated witli sodium Juoride by the pinch method, as follows: A pinch of the powder, as much is can be iivM betAvccii thumb and forefinger, is placed in the feathers next to the skin at the following ■mints —one on tbe hack of the head iml neck, one oii|- the back between he wings, one at of tail, pne just below the vent, one on eith>r thigh, one ou either side of the xest and one on each wing. The powder should be distributed as much is possible over the skin witli the ingers. Do not dust, sett ng hens by iprinkliiig or shaking, as an excess pf powder ma yinjure the subsequent latch. Spring or early summer is also the timeto treat for roost mites, those tiny gray or reddish spider-likc parisites which live and breed in Hie ■racks of roosts, floor, walls, and dropping boards, and suck the blood from the birds at irght. These mites f allowed to gain a fool hold, may increase tremendously during hot weather, and—the timeto check them is early in theseason. Their control requires an entirely different treatment than that for lice, and is aimed to destroy all itages of the mites, incluu.ng the eggs, in their natural hiding ami breeding places in cracks and crevices in the house. A rather coarse, driving spray of carbolineuni (wood • preserver) ami kerosene. equal parts, applied thoroughly to aii interior parts of the house, especially roosts, dropping hoards, and nest boxes, is the best control. Birds should be kept away from the house while it is being sprayed, and the spray should be well dried into the wood before they are allowed to return.
To G»* rt>e Moo* Oo* of tow a 4 Visit to Chicago, Stop at tha COMMONWEALTH HOTEL CHICAGO » jHg-ISS sillH. 1 . On Bsdoto Awener Partcway— AiP lUMpta Paxfc. Only 10 minuue from Hie loop via om own motor conch—rat ouiM aid ■eatful Chicago a Ideal , ftfjt/Tlocation. The Commonwealth as forda every accommodation and luxury v far lt> gueata » Dining Service a la carta. 1 A * Write « Wire I' W. JMlasaa Owner ms’ Muncrr i I
Shouting Greets Acquittal J Os An Alleged Murderer — | Buffalo, N Y„ June 10—(United Press) - An outburst of wild shout I ing and hysterical laughter greeted | the jury's verdict of acquittal early today in die trial of Abraham Feldman, Lockport, lor the killing of his lather, Morris Feldman, a wealthy rial estate dealer. The verdict transformed the court room Korn a group of 200 sober-faced wearied people to 200 wildly euthusia|tic celebrants. Four women, including Mrs. Sarah Feldman, motherj ot the accused man. fainted. Even 1
- . _ j <52.75 to CHICAGO I $3.00 to CLEVELAND Round Trip from Fort Wayne | Sunday Excursions via Nickel Plate Road Proportionately Low Round Trip Fares To Many Other Points Cail on Local Agent of the Nickel Plale Hoad or C. A. Pritchard, D.P.A., Fort Wayne. Ind. 1 ~ -"-J* .-ZT " """' ■■ : IShU Hi IB Drive Our Car equipped with • FULL-SIZE GUM-DIPPED BALLOONS You don't gel much ol a vacation il you only read about the summer resorts. Neither do you gel a irue idea of the delightful motoring comfort of Balioons unless you drive a Balloon equipped car. ('.all us up for an appointment or come in any time and take our car out for a rim around the town. Hunt ilte roughest street the street you dread on High Pressure tires. Notice tlie absence of shocks, vibrations and rattles even at high speed. See how the car holds Io the road on sharp turns. Bring il to a slop. Hie brakes lake hold twice as fast. A ride will convince you - you'll want Balioons and now is the time to get them' —Special Allowance For Old Equipment— Liby & Yost First Street I DECATUR, INDIANA. i You Can Afford It EVERY one can afford to own a Bank Account here. Everything else you buy takes some cer- e tain, fixed sum. But you can “Buy a Bank Account” here I with any sum. Can you say that of ANYTHING ? else in the world you buy? k Ji ffistTNqtional B.cjukCapital and Surplus Pgcgtur, Indigna
court attendante forgot themselves and . .““‘“Urily 1» lb, uulbo "" W “‘ >ta. After the uaual bri<o . Justice CroHby directed thr®’ 11 ' 1 'I’' 1 ’' ■be treed and Fei (ln)il|l , " room for hia home. hllrrn „ f toUr l relatives K ' ,rr ound M hy The killing of tlu . followed hiK refuaai to loail «< «um or money und Ab I throats ugainat the son allt W -—__ o _— WASHINGTON— . 18 '•'OUT WAYNE Fort S . i ,I ‘‘ C ' Os Kl ’ w,,rth ''•’•mucH aJn !tl t<>rt Wayne June 24-26
