Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 11, Decatur, Adams County, 13 January 1930 — Page 3

■lie council ■VENES FOR SESSION ( enters in At* ylv dl' Dino Grandi, | a !y»jV(,niKn Minister j Hi) H*-nry Wood it,,. League of Nations .BM .in.l Hanoi* eonl.-i iii and with , a week later, f i'i League circle; .... | like ■Emv • I "‘ i will Klven ovpr '|H > iiml ailmiiiUti;. Mian -to • ! tart interest in tlie largely tile fr aSjt' t f»i• iKn affairs fur IL'S, 'anre of Grandi's pres the rir«t time Sg9m League was organized 88t.,1 been representeil by | of foreign affairs. Unable to Attend As » <■ S! ;nenre Italy has bee t the important power* that hus not :n lilute the new form of illwhich has been built up L League of setting all inn problems by direct petlait between the foreign lot all countries concerniult of .this abstention on Ipf Italy, due to the fact I recently Mussolini hiniI the post of minister of lairs together with that of ken other ministries, and [ therefore personally atsessions of the League that Italy was entirely [ the new element of perks foreign ministers that pe the predominating facneva whilst the other forIters who always attended bil sessions were handiI the lack of direct perfact with .the Italian former. * result was that the abe latter from the Geneva )f foreign ministers al a little element of doubt

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affPP« jL y ’flEnk a good cigarette. Taste is either there, jM§pps3«v> llwk or it isn’t; deception piays no part. ' We put taste first, in making Chesterg* WSm : W Vffiisi • field. Tobaccos are chosen and blended fig WBm | IjjllF ' \;J ' • for mildness, for aroma, for tobacco 1 * X And Chesterfield’s huge popularity Nk jte r jjtir****! f|| seems to prove that the same thing i «? counts with smokers as with us — e sterfield J$ SUCH POPULARITY MUST BE DESERVED j^ULD,«,... ««j yet THEY SATISFY Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.

as to the precise status of Eure , pout) foreign affairs and tiiiesilons, i Grandi'i announcement that he ] will hereufter attend all sessions of the League council and assembly hus been received at Geneva with marked satisfactioit as creuting an Kruupeun unanimity, a t least us far | as all of the great powers are con i eertied, of meeting International j problems liy direct, personal con- | verstutlons and negotiations. Franco-ltalian Pact Another element of great Imjrortance also uttaches to Grandi'a pri sence at ihe present time for Lie reason that it will give him and Brlnnd an opportunity to have a week's direct personal negotiations relative to a Franco-ltalian naval agreement before the convening of the give-power naval conference at Ixrndon. Much of the suce-ees or possible failure of the latter, it was declared In League circles today, will depend precisely upon the private conversations this week between Briand and Grand!. The entire agenda of the council for the present session Is of secondary Importance with the exception of England's demand for th'> creation of an international commission to regulate the problem of the "Waning Wall at Jerusalem. It is expected that as a result of this demand the council will at last lie obliged to carry out one ot the Holy places in Palestine. This commission has not been created to date owing to the opposition of the various religious elements concerned, bat it is believed that the sit.ua* tion has now become so that the council will act at the pr c se:il session.

Life's Happiness Found in “Doing Un*o Others” An old man who li.nl met life serenely and trniiqiillly for more thnn eighty years was asked Hit secret of his cheerful Lesa. He an swered in four words: 'Thinking ol other folks. . . . You can t travel very far In this world." lie ex plained, “without finding that yum path I* all tangled up with nfliei folks' pallia. Some people think that if they can only travel flieli paths without getting hurt them selves, they're going to tie happy. "But there's more to it than Hint When von’ve learned to dodge n collision, not because you're afraid of gening hurt yourself, hut liecause you're afraid of hurting the other fellow, you're getting near to happiness But when yon arrive at a point where It's a genuine pleas nre never to cause grief to another living soul you're slid closer. In other words, when yin get so far that It’s a joy to you Just to mnke others happy, you're a Iron! there yourself."—Great Thoughts (Lon do*r).

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1030.

League of Nations Ten Years Service Record; Anniversary Today

Ely Henry Wood i Gonevu, Jan. It! —(lip)— The League of .Nations today celebrated , its tenth birthday. In closing the first decade of Its 1 existence leaguers dec lure that Die Lsuglie is Just I filed from every point of view the necessity of Its croa:i ill 1 and Its existence, Th<> 10 years that have just this 1 .*d have demons' rated that as the 1 life of nations goes, an international ' crisis arises on an average of at 1 leant once a year, for which If there were tin n uhlishetl machinery for 1 Its pacific settlement, war might 1 result. ! In the 10 years of the league's 1 existence that organization lias been 1 railed upon no less than 111 times to intervene in International disputes : involving a sn-ore of different, na- 1 tions, any one of which, might otherwise have resulted in armed ' conflict. ( The Twelve Disputes These t welve disputes, now near- ' iy all |wst and forgotten history but |J firebrands of war at the time, are!, as follows: i 1920 It'spute between Sweden i and Finland relative to the possess'oti of the Aaland Islands. 192 u — Dispute between Poland Lithuania relative to the Polish oc- i cupatiou of Vilna. 11*-1 —Projected Serbian invasion of Albania. i | HUM Finland's claims of Soviet's I ill treatment of inhabitant's of East- i ent Carelia. . 1922 — Polish and Czechoslovakian < dispute relative to the Jaworzina i frontier. 1 1923 — Iraq boundary dispute in- i valving Great Britain, Turkey and Iraq. 1922 — Settlement of the Upper Silisian dispute between Poland and Germany. 1923 —Dispute between Italy and Greece resulting in the former’s occupation of Corfou. 1924 Settlement of the Memel dispute with Lithuania. 1925 —Settlement of the frontier conflict between Greece and Bulgaria. 1927 —The Hungarian-Roumanian dispute relative to Hungarian optants in Roumania which is still in process of pacific settlement. 1929 —The Bolivian and. Paraguayan frontier dispute. Aside from justifying its existence in t.he pacific settlement of dispu es I*eaguers ins'st equal justification has been attained in three

other fields which constitute the fundamental ulm of the League's existence namely the permanent malnlenuiu e of peace. Launching of Court These are the launching of the permanent court of international justice ait Ihe Hague and the vast amount of preliminary and preparatory work that hus been accomplished towards (Rearmament and the paoMVc settlement of disputes. Entirely aside from this fnndn mental work of the League It hus covered, through its technical or sanitations, the entire world with o network of international coopera tion which it feels lias also con'ributed materially towards creating amongst the nations an atmosphere of peace and friendly relations. These technical organizations cover a dozen fields of activities including fiinanclal and economic relations, communications and transit, in ermitionsl health, intellectual co n operation suppression of opium 1 1 ami harmful drug traffic, protection of women and children including the suppression of the white slave traffic; settlement of war refugee's, control of the administration of mandated territories; protection of minorities; worldwide abolition of slavery; administration ofc the Saar i valley and the Free Gify of Dantzig, ’ progressive codification of interna- i tional law. Because of the gigantie nature ol the problems undertaken, the first decade of the League's existence, despite the real concrete attainment of many results, has been one largely of preliminary study and preparation. Look to Future Prospects As a consequence, while looking backwards with actual, pride on all tha has been actually attained during the past 10 years, Leaguers, were looking forward with unusual satisfaction today to the prospects for the next few years to come. They will witness, it is declared, the realization of many of the most impor ant projects that have been under study and preparation for the past 10 years. The coming year, they declare, is already typical of* what may lie expected for the other years to come. Already for 1930 the concrete realization of five great projects are foreisqen some of which have been under preparation for almost the enrire ten years of the League’s ex-' urteuce to date; These are as follows: i

1st —Jnle,i naiii| i conference for the declaration of a world wide tariff truce. 2ml - First International conference for tile progressive cudil'lenlon of international law. 3rd The non vocation of the first im tar national disarmament confluence for the world-wide limitation and reduction of armaments. Itli The revision of the* league covenant to tiring it Into harmony with the Kellogg pact. sth The launching during the September assembly of the Briand project for the United Economic States of Europe. As a consequence leaguers feel they were entilled to celgbrute tha tenth birthday of the League's exatenre wi h a feeling of merited sati faction for what it has accomplished to date and of confident nope for its attainments in tlie turn re. RAIN CAUSES SERIOUS FLOOD MENACE AGAIN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) The situation at Vincennes was by far the worst since the disastrous Hood in 1913, with additional thousands of acres being inundated. Landowners armed with guns patroled the levees after reports hail been received that residents betwepn the river and dyks had threatened to dynamite the levees in order that the flood water would recede from their land. The Wabash river at Vincennes Was 223.6 feet, 9.6 feet over flood stage, and threatened to rise higher than the top of the river gauge. The new George Rogers Clark boulevard seawall protecting Vincennes from tlie river, was under] water and engineers feared a break which would flood Half the city. Many residents in the north part of Vincennes have been forced by the rising waters to leave their homes. One-hundred and fifty members of the American I*egion yesterday were ordered to be ready for duty if the levee breaks. Bedford was threatened witii suspension of its municipal water I pumping station as White river rose at the rate of 3.5 inches in an hour.

I CONGRESS TODAY ♦ —(U.R) ♦ Congress receives preliminary report of President Hoover's law enforcement commission. Senate: Continues debate on sugar tar- • iff. Radio hearing continues. Cotton price Investigation con- ' 1 1 limes. House: Coni limes work on war depart--11 ment appropriation bill. Receives treasurypost office np- . porpriation Bill. Alleged Hank Robber Held At Shelbyville Shelbyvllle, Iml., Jun. 13. —(UPI , — Loren McM nils, 29, Elwood. ' was being held here today awaiting transportation to Indianapolis where lie will he questioned in regard to participation In the robbery of tlie* Falrlami National l>ank of more than SI,BOO last Tuesday. McMinda was identified late Saturday By I). (’. Gordon, mshier ot the iiank; Charles Hughes, bookkeeper, and Luther Abel, Fail-land postmaster, all of whom were in the bank at the time of the robbery,. NOTICE Some needy and deserving person may have a good soft coul burner, free of charge, by calling for same soon, at 609 Monroe Street, tel-:-ohone 521. Mrs. R. W. Sholty It — o Gene Tunney Will Undergo Operation i New- York, Jan. 13. —(U.R) —Gene Tunney will bp operated on for a serious kidney ailment at 3 p. m. i today. The retired heavyweight champ- ■ ion. accompanied try his wife, the . former Polly Lauder, arrived at : Presbyterian hospital at 11 p. in., • yesterday. Mrs. Tunney remained • ] with him throughout tire night. Site ; wiii not leave until she lias lippii advised that her husband is out of danger. ■ Doctors George W. Fish, .1. Bent- • lev Squire, Robert J. Shea and Carnes Weeks agreed to perform i the operation on Tunney's right • kidney at 3 p. m. ’ Dr. Weeks said Tunney’s kidneys had been ailing for three weeks, i He refused to say whether the con- - dition had been brought about try r the severe body pummelling Tuni|ney received in Itis two fights with Jack Dempsey.

"The X-Ray shows u atone in tln* pelvis of the right kidney," he suld.

BEWARE THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON

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PAGE THREE

"it might oiniHi* possible den-true- . tion us the kidireyn."

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