Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 25 February 1926 — Page 3

I PASTURE IS I SCARCE NOW |^»nn e - 9 ®Of predicament I R,L.V County Agent. ■ Jiri” » CoUn ‘ y a * e,,t ' S B .„al that many farmers are a! B “L. to know how they ran manage, B * I.h pasture this spring and 1 B “ f “?r fur their livestock, especially B"® fair’ll hprd of ,la ‘ ry COW 3 B maintained on a small farm. B n riun for this condition Is, in B , tin- to the fact that poor B ,M \<" of red clover were obtained 9 ■ ,t,D r Some recommendations 9 “"Xo beh’W for the consideration 9 those in such a predicament. 9 The crop that probably will make 9 Jture which can be used the 9 521« 08ts - This can bP sown as ■ , as weather permits, using a 9 h'W seeing of three bushels per ■ ‘ ' ]t sill be ready by the middle ■ 'Ju.y or thereabouts. Sudan grass, 9 which is often considered the most I promising "pinch hitter” for dairy. I ows when lasting through the hot S rjmtner ntoaths is considered, can be I Ln as soon as danger from frost >s ■ owr or approximately May 10 to 20. ■ nf ’ground should be well prepared ■ to insure freedom from weeds and ■ .bout 15 pounds " f sudan grass see<l ■ w wn to the acre, covering it very ■ lightly. H should not be pastured ■ until 6 to 8 inches in height which I probably will be about .July 1 to 10. I Sudan pasture is good until frost. | Sweet clover, probably the most ■ nctessful cow pasture known when I timber of animals it will support ami I quality of pasture is considered, may I be sown as would red clover. But a ■ Hirer way of having sweet clover ■ pasture in the fall is to sow it alone | whenever the ground can be properly ■ prepared. Million Long Distance 'Phone Calls Sent From Indianapolis In A Year Indianapolis, Ind., Feb. 25—(United Press 1 — During the last year the people of Indianapolis transacted ' business outside the city through over 1,006,000 long distance telephone tails, figures in the office of the Indiana Bell Telephone company reveal, she calls went out from Indianspelts to every state in the union and tn Canada and Mexico, and probably tn equal number of incoming calls were received. ' It has been estimated that there ■ treat least 169,978,000 calls handled I i by the local exchanges in one year,' exclusive of long distance messages. o NOTABLE SIGNATURES ON OLD TABLE-CLOTH Bar Mills, Me.. Feb. 25. — (United Press)—An autographed table-cloth formerly owned by the late Kate Douglas Wiggin Riggs, widely-known author. has been received by Mrs. J. W. Messerve of this village. The table-cloth, which the writer used when entertaining guests at her home, bears the autographs of 115 notables of the past and present, including Mark Twain, Henry Irving, Richard Harding Davis, Carl Schurz and Annie Louise Carey. , a o elimination of curves SAVES THIRTY MILES I New Orleans, Feb. 25. — (United Press)—The“kinkiest” public highway I in the South is to be “ujntwisted" j shortly and automobllists need no i longer tear dizziness when navigating | lhe more than 200 curves in the New Orleans-Baton Rouge highway. With the completion of the work of straightening this roadway, the distance between the two cities will be reduced from 110 bo approximately 80 miles, Does Your Back Ache? Backs Bring Suffering to Many Decatur Folks •» that dull, constant backache making you o ld and migerabie? Does r°ur back throb and ache until it you just can't keep going? Do . utt suffer headaches, dizzy spells and luary disorders; feel weak, tired Dd Worn ’ ol,t ? Then look to your neys. Delay may mean serious atlney sickness! Use Doan’s Pills— ‘ L s ''®ulant diuretic to the kidneys. | folks 8 Sre reconimen( l e( l by Decatur Ernst Schlickman, 311 North >• J )ec atur, says: “Mornings I th. ~t irwl an<i had no energy to start ana i Sy 8 Wor E. My back was w'eak n ame an <l often ached. My kidpnT actcti Irregularly, too. Doan’s, brim r .° m Emith, Yager & Falk’s eivon nT e re ' iev ed me.” (Statement n? ? Ctober 23 - 1920.) | said "r> ne 6 ’ 1924> Mrs - Schlickman to ria °° an 8 Pills have never failed 60s T kitlne y trouble.” I Co a 1 dealerß - Foster-Milburn Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. j

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This is the first posed photograph of the Salm baby, now fifteen months old. His father, Count Salm, is at Palm Beach to visit the boy, who is in the custody of his mother, the former yiilliccnt Rogers. She one day will inherit her father’s tjjO.OCO.OOO which in time will pass on to her son,

Peter. Rotary Convention Will Have Delegates From Thirty Nations Denver, Feb. 25.—(United Press)— Thirty-three nations of the world, represented at the intermtional convention of Rotary Clubs to be held here next June, will have floats in a giant electrical pageant to be staged on the night of June 14. I The pageant will be headed by the famous Mexican national band of 45 pieces and will include 100 Blackfoot Indians in their original costumes. Other features of note will be a .“.V>ng fest," in which noted boy bands 'from the United States and Canada will take part. The President's Ball, always a gala affair, will be held on the night of June 16. i On the afternoon of June 17, the I "Wilde West” will have its fling when 'a chapter of Cheyenne Frontier Days will be presented in Denver with bucking horses, roping and other phases of the sport. Foreign visitors of note include the finance minister of Italy, from Milan; secretary of state of Czecho-Slovakia; la cabinet member from the court of [Queen Wilhelmina, of Holland and leading diplomata from Ireland, Great Britain and othe rcountries. | o — Foreign Minister Says Japan Will Not Meddle With Affairs In China Tokyo—(United Press.) —A declaration of Manchurian policy has been made in the House of Peers by the Foreign Minister in response to taunts from the opposition that the present cabinet had failed so far to protect Japenese interests in Manchuria and Mongolia. Inferentially, the opposition takes the stand that Japan should double or treble the number of Japanese troops ip Manchuria, to a strength sufficient to enforce a policy of “closed reason on all war north of the Great Wall.” Baron Shidehara. who said he welcomed the opportunity of making a plain statement of Japanese policy towards Manchuria in particular and Chin in general, replied in effect that ' Japan will not hesitate to employ all | necessary means for the protection of I her treaty rights in Manchuria, r ght. recognized by all the world, but Japan will not go beyond that, nor under take any action that could be construed as interfering in any domestic affair of China. I If Chinese choose to fight Chinese, in Manchuria or anywhere else, that | is their business with which Japan will not interfere so long as Japanese rights are not involved and Japanese ' life and property is not endangered, | Shidehara pointed out.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. THURSDAY FEBRU-AFV 25, 1926.

Japan is a party to international agreements to respect the territorial integrity of China and Chinese sovereignty over her recognized territory, ami Japan intends to abide by her international agreements, he continued. It is generally understood that Baron General Tanaka, leader of the main opposition party, who was minister of war when the Siberian intervention took place, favors a much more aggressive altitude toward China. If his party, the Seiyukai, should gain power in the expected general elections this summer, a forward movement by Japan in Manchuria may be expected. 0 SWEDEN USING FILMS TO TEACH AGRICULTURE Stockholm, Feb. 25. —(United Ureas) —Up-to-date farming is now being taught by film in Sweden and in schools and strmy barracks moving pictures are used more and more to convey instruction. For the education of farmers the Royal Board of Agriculture has just released four reels, showing the latest methods in drainage, haying, sugar beet cultivation and the use of electrical equipment in barns.

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Quick Way to End ’ Dangerous Cough j Why let a dangerous cough hang on j when you can, through a simple treat- ■ ment, get speedy relief and often break 1 it up completely in 24 hours? This treatment is based on the fa- j mous Dr. King’s New Discovery for ! Coughs. You take just one teaspoon- [ ful and hold it in your throat for 15or j 20 seconds before swallowing it. It has , a double action. It not only soothes .[ and heals irritation, but also removes j the phlegm and congestion which are , 'he real cause of the coughing. So the 10 worst cough quickly disappears. Dr. King’s New Discovery is for ■ coughs, chest colds, bronchitis, spas- t modic croup, etc. Fine for children, j too—no harmful drugs. Very econom- • ical, as the dose is only one teaspoon- L ful. At all good druggists. Ask for j i!

— D “Your Health” ( This Column la conducted by the Adamo County Medical Society and the Indiana State Medical Association in the interest of the public's health. GOITER ANO IODINE "See your family physician if you lave a goiter, because only a physician cun tell a 'simple' goiter from lhe more hidden but often more virulent types, and he is the only one to determine whether you should or should not take iodine.” This is the warnfng against the indiscriminate and often times fatal use of iodine by "enthusiastic amateurs” contained in the bulletin issued today by the Publicity Bureau of the Indiana State Medical Association. "Indiana Is in the heart of the goiter belt and since the wide spread publication of the fact that, goiter "Y I due to a lack of iodine 'u '>a .eod, i salt and water, HcLJlers have become regular .odine fiends,” con \lnue« 'be bulletin. J Of all the medical remedies rbund in every household none perhaps is as well known as iodine, that dark brown, poignant liquid which seems to penetrate to the very roots of a man’s soul, has a ‘kick’ all its own and can play more tricks than almost any commonly known drug. “Because of its tempermental character, iodine has become known as the 'imp' of the family medicine cabinet. The average American’s faith in iodine was established in the war.-when this drug was the most carefully guarded article in the first aid packet of every soldier. In fapt iodine acquired such a reputation that when any one asked ’Who won the war?’ the doughboy- would invariably answer ‘lodine and C. C. pills.’ This answer came from the heart, for seldom did any one ever answer an army sick call without getting a liberal external or internal dose of lioth. Nor did the end of the war end the front page prominence of iodine, for word came from Switzer-’

I ■ HAVE YOU RENEWED I I /k Your Subscription I I to the | I M Decatur Daily I ms Ji 1 jSI Democrat I • ■ j Z Don’t take chances on missing a single copy Hi / of “Home-Paper,” with its Local News, Fp United Press Dispatches, Markets, Fea- < hires, Sports, Daily Events. $ ■j- w % RENEW NOW DURING THE 23rd ffi S ANNUAL RENEWAL CAMPAIGN ffi s /BSI? V ffi For Less Than One Cent A Day S You Can Get All The NewsSi uI $3.00 ATEAR M FIRST ZONE | I"’ $3.50 A YEAR IN ANT OTHER ZONE I CALL AT THE OFFICE OR MAIL YOUR CHECK s SR ‘ ® ‘ Decatur Daily Democrat | | ADAMS COUNTY’S DAILY NEWSPAPER g

Lnd that lodine had been found to be a useful preventative in many cases of goiter. Without! hjesitation l|ie American public picked up this fact and applied the use of iodine to all goiter canes. "Quacks quickly capitalized the belief of the general public in this half truth and the market, was flood ed with RO called lodine remedies Warning cannot be stressed too strongly against tlfe promiscuou,s use of these many goiter 'remedies’ on the market. "Il must, be remembered that the administration of iodine to children as carried on in Switzerland is done as a preventative and not as a cure lodine instead of helping is an abso lute poison to individuals who have certain types of goiters. In view of the fact that many deaths have resulted from toxic goiter and \hat these goiters in many xastm nave been fed by so-called goiter remedies,’ one "Jiould guard against the u«“ V ,ny solution for the treat.ctent of goiter after it has developed except under a competent physician's direction.” ■ ■■ ■■■ o Supreme Court To Decide When Judge’s Tenn Ends Columbus. Ind., Feb. 25. — (United Press) —The supreme court of Indiana will be called upon to decide when the term of Julian Sharpnack, judge of the Bartholomew circuit court, ends, it was indicated today. Sharpnack, who was appointed to fill the unexpired term of John W. Donaker, deceased, contends that it does not expire until January 1923, when Donaker's, term would have expired. Clarence Custer, and George Ix>ng, democratic candidates for the office, believe the appointment ends followling the election next fall. o Counsel For Countess Is Working Overtime New York. Feb. 25. —(United Press) —Counsel tor Vera, Countess of Cath|cart. is working overtime to untangle I the legal maze which developed when it was announced her ten-day "shore

leave' hud made qn* tionablr her right to habeas corpus proceeding ■> . Arthur Garfield Hays, counsel for the countess, asked United States Attorney Buckner to adjourn the hahoa corpus proceedings hearing from March 2 U» March 5. The Count, is' liberty will expire at 11 a in , Wedne day ami the adjournment of the hear Ing, Hays believes, will make ( p<, tide her right to a federal court t<- i ■ - o — PERU—W. F. Brlghty was indicted charged witli possessing a still. Brlghty is a railroad conductor.

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TAX PUBLICITY Ro< heder, N. 11. F' h. fill.-—(United ' Press)—Tax Collector William K. Kimball has dis<g)V»red .1 urefire method to rnak<- delinquents pay their back tax* 1 *. A list of names of delinquents ha ■ been posted in lhe *how window of a Main-street store. The umotint of taxes ranged from 63 cents to |l6O. According to Kimball, almost f-12,-000 has been received since this publicity idea was inangnarated.