Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 97, Decatur, Adams County, 23 April 1930 — Page 3
mis MORONS It M P.O. frhMON l'svlchol<>j*ist ■l ,It stive I ests 5 , Apr I 23 —I UP) , r , n of the people in Sial are morons, Dr. ■MB ■ <■ I addle ss here ■ . 1,, i L ih<- o her h.il,' I "Ven II <1 s a r KI3L sir ami one halt' from I s - — — ■—— '
I a j i*d!a ■’-■ W CT «1 > K Ha Quick Shampoo! " M removes every bit of dirt. R yumminess. 100°l pure J so kind to hair and scalp! 0 10 cents. Try i< today. © I ■*• Tnr“ I
-'■ r> C 1 ■Mzurtam bale <«k|S I *^B—-, KR IS S KROSS BO V\ vs French Marquisette wf|. x \\ lH H LEI) CURTAINS line Quality, Ecru Color, Extra B ■ m Wide Curtains, 2’4 yards long. g ■ J 89c ■K 7351 COTTAGE-SET I 1 Cream Color with colored border ■LI r'l Green, and Blue Bullied Edges, mfr I'jot 2’4 vards long, per pair J' J„ SI.OO 9 LACE CURTAINS Lovely shadow lace and allover patterns in fine net lace. Hemmed or Fringed on bottom. 2’4 yards long. Pcr . pair .... $2.00,, P . I MARQUISETTE CURTAINS I color marquisette with silk on bottom, hcs wide, 2’4 yards long SI.OO K!sl .TSa-l CONGOI.EUM rugs B Hn Genuine Gold Seal Quality H S . all the ncw designs I 6x9 ft $4 - 90 I 7x9 ft $6.1 o 9x12 fts9 75 IBvcoLEUM by the yard ■W’d’le Quality, 6 ft and. 9 ft wide, square yard UJ/L I Niblick & Co.
to Hi yeaiK mentally, which | M prob .l ably the highest limit In human in- 1 I telllgeiieo. he said. Halt the population of this conn- 1 try falls In the mental age group! lofSto 12 yearn, he declarer!. -| i "The problem In one of education 1 iiiul not i.< -I, gution." |) r i; ( ,(|,| il |. | ■aid. "These people should he train-" e<l in concrete things that they ian inidei stand Dr. (loddard classified the feei Ido-minded i n t o idiots, intbetdiet! ■ Uid morons, lie ascribe I heredity its the t hies can e, ami s.iid that he" never has seen a case where alcohol or discus' was entirely to ! billin'-. The hitter conditions killrather than malm the child, he th -I clareil. SEES LATIN PROBLEM AS U.S.'GF WEST I" Harry Elmer Barnes Sets Forth Views on Foreign Policy in Book lly 11. All 'n Smith (United Press Staff Correspondent) ■ New Yo :< April 23- (UP)—-The! ino.st immediate- problem in inter- 1 imt'onal relations now facing the I United S utes is that of bringing n-, bout a satisfactory adjustment of I lour relations with Latin-Ametlean 'conntrie , in the opinion of Harr v I I Elmer Ila. nes, noted sociologist and Historian, who sets for h his views :.u foreign policy in his latest book "World politics in Modern Civiiiza . Ition." just published by Alfred A. | Knopf i ij.iinos' new book is a sclvolarly appraisal of the world political siti a ion, together with a study ol ■ the growth and development of 'such forces as nationalism, capital | ism. imperial! nt and militarism After Pacing the growth of each ■of the e forces, he expounds hie creed -that of a liberal political hinker-on "a sensible foreign policy for the Un’ted Sta os," Our behavior in Latin-American countries dining the last three de■ades, flames believes, has consti , uted cur chief contribution to ntiliI ary and imperialis ic “behaviorI pattern" and has "impres ed the 1 world outside as a standing denial
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1930.
I | Love Bahn Bomb Burst Nest . —IT - — —— WW * Domestic bliss ffiMp 1 of William ,-r ■ / Willet k. Jr., t . I heir to the 7 JmhM 1 Willock steel f K tv errs '.'tir ? /. .inpine s s after the nation-wide furore had d'ed down when he married - his mother's chambermaid. Now trouble comes to mar VWH their happiness |Bb. B in the form of a $25u.000 ’ "* j a / B ..Jot suit by another maid ! ' " y , iWU*! m his mothei's f house. _ f " W>l L——3
0: car public and formal pro'estations of peace and good will. ” "Our public proclamations of pa- | ifism and good will." he writes, “can never impress either our Lai-in-American neighbors or our critics across the seas until we decisively ibamlon the whole principal of mili-i ary intervention adopted to afford .election to tile priva e loans of 1 American investors.” , [ These investors. Barnes contends' should be made to take their own risks when they engage in financial j dealings outside the United S ates.; Another tenet of Barnes' creed ails upon the United States to stig-;e-t a revision of such parts of the t' ea ies of Varsailles. St. Germain rrii.mo-1 and Neuilly as were based >ll the assumption that guilt forth : .Vorld War lay with the Central I Powers. It is also necessary, Barnes wiites, "to recognize the complete! tbsenee of any jus ification for any ! Cj.ariHions whatever front the Cen-i ral Power . beyond their just r.mtml participation in restoring the irt as devastated by active warfare. | rite obligations of the Central Powets have already more than been filfilled by reparations payments made to date." 'I here appears no direct moral g.-oiiunds lor the cancellation of de-its owed to the United States by member- of he Entente coalition during the war, Barnes holds. "The i-ntente gro sly deceived the people of the United States as to the causes of the world war." he wril.’s, “and the issues envolvcd Ihen :.i. even hough President Wi.son v.as aware of lhe Secret Treaties at 1 lie very time he was expounding tlie idealism o this European allies,' France, .ays Barnet, in tripling her national indebtedness sim-ej il ls for ihe primary purpose of fin-1 ant ing a great standing army al i home. "Is ac iially ninth more tiangerotis 10 world peace ami jusiic'! .mu ucrni.ii.y t as alien ed to be in | he period before 1914 " Our debt se.tleiueut witli Italy i rid sub Hipiant loans made to her.l Barnes holds, "ctmstitii e the most j Ilagri.nt vio! ition of Wilson's r.ia
r pains In your back, legs, groin cr stomach they may be caused by a rupture. By all means find out by consulting your physician a. once. Neglecting a rupture, even a tiny one, is dangerous. | Our service Is to fit trusses correctly. A trained Truss Fitter Is here all the time. We handle the famous Akron Sponge Rubber Pad Trusses exclusively and guarantee every truss we sell to hold the rupture. No charge for examination or consultation. Drug Co. B. J. Smith Decatur, Ind.
i i jor premise in our wartime program —that of making the world safe tor I democrat y.’’ The Easciet regime tn . Mussolini, he wri.es, “is unquestionably the outstanding challenge to democracy in .he world today the most insolent opponent of demo- | Ic.ucy in t ontemporary world society, and yet It is financed by th ■ I ; United States." Barnes suggests that the Uni cd I j States should favor and participate " a a world economic conference, ■ whiili would have as its purpose! the wiping out o! all war den s and . ! reparations and the establishment of a mode of control over lnter-na-1 tional loans, so that this country would at least likely to contribute' s.iliport of "such menaces to peace as French military dictatorship and ■ [ he Fascist crusade against Demo-1 I cracy." The League of Nations, Barnes | ! writes, should be transformed from | I"a league oi victors" into "a iruej 'organization oi all civilized nations lof the world, designed to promote peace, disarmament, outlawry of war and international justice.' The present situation as regards armaments, Barnes contends, is to be accepted, then it is logical! that each state must be allowed to, arm itself in proportion to its capacity therefor." Our government’s persistent fail-1 lire to recognize the Soviet government,” Barnes holds, “can find less support in tact, logic ami principle, tnuii .-ay other rrmeiple of American foreign policy ,n the last decade He contends ha', there are no grounds for the Uniled States' failin' to rm.imam formal relations wiih at.oiher talc be.iu.se we His approve of Us political and econoI ~.c systems. bOoiOhy. MS “ORGHEsTkA”OF TYPING PUPILS [New System Increases Speed as Well as Interest Boston, April 23 (UP) -Almost ! my day, if you stand within earhot ot Boston University’s college of practical arts and letters, you nay hear a sti.mge staccato rhy.;m, a novel iniei'pre nl.mi of a eur-j rently popular tunc. Investigation will show lli.it Um! weird melody, a fasciu.din,; as I i- j dol-dasli-dot of a telegraph in lru-| men , emanates from what is proiiably the count.y’s only typewri.er orchestra. Miss l.lizab-th Carvell, instructor. inaugurated the plan recently "to demonstrate the elas icity oi tlie method of it ing rhythm in typeing." vVliile a phonograph plays, for example, Parade of tlie Wooden Soldiers" or some other tune that lends itself to touch system interpretation, the 14 "musicians" sit in orchestra formation and tapp out an tbbilgafo. One group devotes its technique io m.mung u i. the melody, aiv'tner to hammering out the second part, while a third punches away at the iass. T lie ultimate eflecl is surprisingly rhythmic. it may not necessarily speed up ..he words per minu e.” Miss Carveil explains "but it gives a uniformity to the worl: which otherwise .s often lacking. The second aim In using music; is to give a new interest to the typewriting work and , key up tlie girls to a new stride in heir progre s.” o An Exception Scientists say different species lever unite in tiulure. Wluit about [ tlie political bee and tlie liumbug? ■ Sau Fruuclsco Chronicle.
DIXIE TRAINS ; I WHISTLE TUNE AT CROSSINGS Southern Railroad Tries New Warning as Aid to Sleepers Memphis Tenn, April J i (UP) 1 .Calliope whistles ludng at-.iejied ns ! a part of the "eg ilar equipment on | ii.i senget engines on the Southern ! railroad operating in Dixie are prov j Ing popular, officials of the road say. | These mnsleal whistles are to be bibown or played in the train approaches crossings ami stations ii: ! towns along the routes at night. Their purpose, officials of tlie I oad explain, will lie to avoid disturbing persons who have the habit of going to bed early and who are not uncustomed to unusual nois, s during the night. Residents of many of the towns have complained that the shrill steam whistles awaken them at all hours of the night. During the day
Ig" pours fragrance — § into these tobaccos LONG DEFORE the choice leaves of golden Turkish and velvety brown Domestic tobacco are selected for Camel Cigarettes, nature’s own alchemy has worked a miracle in them that no effort of man can hope to duplicate. Every tiny leaf-cell is irradiated—stored full of goodness by the clean, pure vigor of the sun! Our share in the making of Camels is to see that all of the fragrance, Ml/// madness, mellowness, aroma —in a word all of the natural goodness of l^CSe sun ’ r ‘P to b accos i s preserved and developed—then to combine them into the smooth, delightful harmony of the famous Camel blend, manufacture them into cigarettes by the most modern methods ///| | You can taste the natural goodness in every delicious puff of a '||' Camel Cigarette. Camels for real smoke pleasure fk 1910, R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
|mid in the open tdretchen of the] [ country liluxts from tlie iintiinefn! | steam whißtlee will be nouiiilod. The I’iiHt calliope whlutle recently I wan inaialled on tin engine run by I file veleian engineer Mike Brady. !Others will be added us rapidly ns possllile, offii lais nay. They ure cii Ihuaiustic over the Innovation. I Light pipe org Uh like whistles | ranging from 'a to three Inches in hi-iglit me cons!rutted on n pl|>e a-, long Hie Hunt of lhe engine, A key- ! I>oard in Hie engine t ab enables Hie I "engineer to produce on tlie device ;> I Isoft .ruther melodious sound. I I'.ngineei Brndy Ims been u ing i his several days and declares he is" rapidly mastering such tunes as; “Alahmiiu Bound.'' "Dixie" mid > “Casey .loner.“ Hi' "run is from j Memphis to S'lefr eld, Ala , mi lilt i Memphis division ot the Southern." 1 Tlie new whistle is proving popu-[ Inr with iriiinmen mid lias been r" eelved enthusiastically in towns a long the Memphis-Sheffield tonic. Soul hern offlt ials say. ■ ———— — * Dads Turn to Archery Antigo, Wis, (UP) Arehery. ' recently promoted among tlie Bov Set ills here, has been extended to Hu- eldei s with a club of 1;' charter m> niinl.-i' having been luimed l»j Antigo men.
FRENCH AIRMEN SEES GLIDER AS EXPERIMENT Founder of Eero Club of France Pays Hiifh Tribute to (01. Lindbergh — ('level.ni'l. April 23 (UP) Th' il-der H n "lllleresH ig experiment, I but absolutely worthless In a com- ' ui-ri j.il way,’’ County Henry De Vmtlx fund-is French aeronaut mid I pre ident of Hr 1 Fe 'etaf ion AeroItia ique Internationale, believes. De Vaulx de* lured the glim .' I'ii'Ve- would be pr.ic ic.il des|iite th.': i li Itr experiments of Col. Cliari'-S X. Lindbergh and ('apt. Franl; M Haw ks. The Couni paid hi h tribute to l.iudbergh. deilming lhe drama ot' I his achievements and the h'lrolc 1 huracter of tlie titan himself, were [ e i onsibie fin most of the progre " Xnierlca has made In aviation. "H ' s good modes hoy," Hie (i’• yeat old airman said. “And lie’s gre.it flier My Prance /•&! Sb
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’.love him!" Concerning comparative achievei mentu ol Freni li and American airiip'ii Hie Count : dniitted, “lint ye , I .on ure way aliiiud of us. But of II our"' you have lhe money here I non ?' De Vaulx made hi i first air trip [in a hdloon in IX9B. He Is the font.- , i|i-r of Hu 1 Aero Club of Franco, lias won HinneioiiH medals I'oT 111)1[ooning, and Is a Chevalier of Hi" | Legion of Honor. I . o Soldier's Souvenirs I.omlon, (UP) Among the •'proud posse- lons of Private Hurry , i I’ree of Hie West Yorkshire Regiment, (Prince of Wales' Own) said II (o lie Britain's oldes serving solI die:, are the first pair or socks Is- [ sued to lilui when lie joined th > service fid years ago, and his dog ■| 'Windy," lioi u in Hie trenches in HI9IB. i — - (j — Postpone Mme Meeting Mexico City --(UP) I lie nationi "til mining congress has boon postI' poned until Mt.y 12. It was learned "many prominent mining men would • lie unable to attend if the session . was held earlier. The mee ing will last five days, during which problems created hy lhe present low -■ prices of silver, lead and zine Will lie- discussed.
