Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 167, Decatur, Adams County, 15 July 1932 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind.. Post Office aa Second Class Matter. v 1. H. Heller Pree. and Gen Mgr. A. R. Holthouse Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies _...| .02 One week, by carrier .111 One year, by carrier ..... 5.00 One month, by mall- 35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Rix months, by mall ...... 1.75 One year, t«y mail 3.00 Pae year, at office. 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere >3.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER, Inc., 35 East Wacker Drive. Chicago 415 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dallies. It's fine swimming weather and its the finest sport you can engage in, if you are as careful as you know you ought to be. Some one suggests this slogan . for the G. O. P. for this year: “For! sale — Eleven million dinner pails, all empty.” The heat wave is like the depression. After so long, you get used to it but you don't like it any better. We presume a relief hill known ‘its a Hoover measure would be much sounder than one called the Gamer bill, even if they contain » practically the same items. ■ The U. S'. senators are going to watch campaign expenditures this » year, they declare, but so far they .. haven't found any thing but deficits - " . in each party to keep an eye on. Ex-President Cal Coolidge has de- ' dined with thanks the offer to be- • come president of the Federal Fi- . t'aime Corporation, another wise leewdon to chalk up to the old boy. That’s a tough old job and we don't 2. doubt that the boss gets heck any „ way he moves and Mr. Coolidge is pot hunting troubles. » Billy Sunday has declined in a . rather hoity-toity manner, the pro- » bibltlon nomination for vice-presi- • dent, or rather the offer for that p ace. Billy would have been about • the most popular choice for presi- “ dent on that ticket and we don't - blame him for being a little peeved • that they are trying to put him on « the tail-end and after several oth- . rrs have declined. • We have heard many complain I » that water, light and gas bills are « higher this year than when times I » are good, even though they have * “ tried to be more careful than usual, i “ It does seem that way and we can't ! - explain it unless we are all at home - more than when we could buy gas and oil without caring about the expense. The first bill in the special sess- » ion to become a law was as might „ have been expected, an appropriation of 1120.000 to pay the mem- ” Iters. If it takes a week to put that ! “ through what time will be required ” to pass on the couple of hundred «• other measures? Os course we un-

1 "' ■' WAKE UP YOURI LIVER BILE—WITHOUT CALOMEL And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Ratin’ to Go If you feel sour and mink and the world * looks punk, don't swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative eandy or chewing gum aud expect them to make you sudoeniy sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. Fqr they can’t do it. They only more the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t ret at “ the cause. The reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. ; If this bile ia not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gam bloats up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, akin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned. It takes those good, eld CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you fed ‘ up and up.” They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bijr flow freely. But don't ask (or liver pills. Aak for Carter's Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter'l Little Liver Pills on the red label. Resent f wmUtoto. Zfc at ail stone. OLWIQM-Ca

derstatid that this particular does I not reduce taxes but It was probably necessary. The members of the special sens- ' lon seem to be on the spot with j the measure to repeal the Wright ' bone dry law. In the house the wets defeated the minority report to postpone action by a vote of 51 to 41 and the senate is close. The repeal will probably be adopted before they get through, though its not as easy as it looked a week ago before they got down to serious consideration and some of them heard from home. The corn borer is to have full sway the next year and we shall find out whether or not the predictions that if the government quit fighting they would destroy the corn crop in a few years. For fourteen years the federal forces have been spending large sums annually to fight this worm hut under present conditions, the appropriation was cut out and the farmer and corn borer will have to look out for j themselves. John H. Stewart, former employee of this office, now located at Newark. New Jersey, says that part ot the country is strong for Roosevelt and Garner and will vote that way, regardless of any thing Mayor Hague of Jersey City may have said in his interviews. John says he lias heard hundreds of people in street cars, buses, the subway, restaurants and other places declare their preferences and in no uncertain tones and invaribly they are tor Roosevelt. There seems to be considerable merit in the bill ot Senator Watson to provide home loan banks, to provide the first 5125,000,000 of capital and to loan to building and lean associations, saving companies. mortgage banks and saving associations. It will no doubt prove n great boon if properly distributed and without too much red tape. The latter has made the Finance Reconstruction Corporation almost useless to the average rural community and of all the things we need in government these days, we want simplicity in the conduct of affairs most ot all. o * RADIO PROG RAM Friday's Five Best Radio Features! Copyright 1932 by UP. Central Standard Time WABC, CBS network. 1:30 p. m. —Toscanini Fund Concert. WJZ. NBC network. 5:45 p. m. —Jones and Hare. WEAF. NBC network, 6 p. m. — Concert and Cavaliers. WABC. CBS network, 7 p. m. — j Week-End Hour. I WABC, CBS network, 8:15 p. m. I—Adventures in Health. Saturday's 5 Best Radio Features Copyright. 1932. by UP. Central Standard Time WABC. CBS network. 6:30 p. m. —Lewisohn Stadium- Concert. WJZ. NBC network. 7 p. m.— Band Concert. WJZ. NBC network, 7:30 p m. —First Nighter. WEAF. NBC network. 8 p. tn.— Dance Hour—Guest Orchestras. WABC. CBS network. 8:15 p m. —Public Affairs Institute. Sunday's Five Best Radio Features WABC. CBS network. 4 p. m.— Ballad Hour. WJZ. NBC network, 5:30 p. m. — The Grenadiers. WABC. CBS network, 6:30 p. m. —Lewisohn Stadium Concert. WEAF. NBC network. 7:15 p. m —Album of Familiar Music. WABC. CBS network, 8:30 p. m. —Dramatic Play. Monday's Five Best Radio Features WJZ. NBC network, 5:45 p. m.— Jones and Hare. j WJZ. NBC network. 7 p. m. — I I Minstrel Show. I WEAF, NBC network. 7.30 p. m. 1 —Parade of States. WABC. CBS network. 7:45 p. m. I —Modern Male Chorus. WABC. CBS network. 9:30 p m. —Columbia Symphony Orchestra. o Camden May Change Name Camden. Me— (U.PJ —lt is contemplated naming this town Cami den-by-the-Sea. to avoid confusion. !is there are 16 other Camdens in the United States.' -—. BARGAINS — Bargains In Living Room, Dining Room Suita, Mattresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number ie 44 ct.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1932.

PEACE THROUGH PREPAREDNESS By CHARLES BURTON ROBBINS. Former Assistant Secretary of War.

It is a well known fact, familiar to most students of history, that unpreparedness in the United States has been one of the main contributing causes to all of our foreign wars, and this in spite of the warning first issued by George Washington In those memorable words “My friends, in time of peace prepare for war," and reiterated by | him in many of his messages to | Congress and public addresses. National leaders, tollowing Wash-: Ington’s administration, refused to j believe in any form of prejiared--neas and the War of 1812 resulted. At the opening if that war the regular army had' been reduced to less than 7,000 men and the navy to only eight ships, four of them . forty-tours, and a fleet of gunboats j which had been built for river and harbor protection, which it was dis- ( covered al the outbreak of the war. could not put to sea. and yet with the army and navy in this condition we declared war on one of the; mightiest nations in the world, cer-j talnly the strongest in sea power, | it was fortunate for the United ( States that the resources of Great. Britain, including both hei» armyi and navy, were being used in the' great Napoleonic struggle then go-1 ing on in Europe. She could ill as-. ford to send ships of war or trained soldiers to far-off America, yeti so firm was the conviction in the I European mind that America could! not he "kicked into a fight" that; embargoes against our ships and 1 impressment of our sailors had gone on for years almost undisturbed. An almost identical situation pre-1 sents itself so far as regards the war with Mexico. Santa Anna hadp a powerful and well equipped army ' end felt he could look with disdain I on the despised Yankee, who was! not sufficiently interested in the! welfare of his country to provide: an effectual force for national de-' sense. The war would have been I over in six months had the United ; States possessed an army and navy which her size and resources would j well have permitted at that time. We won that war with untrainedi troops, but at a tremendous loss of' life made neci -ary by throwing I them into the I ; le line without sufficient preparation. A good many of us remember the i outbreak of the Spanish war. At that time the United States poss-1 essed a regular army of only 25.000 I men. deemed insignificant by the

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■' government of Spain. Anyone who ' w ill read the Spanish Journals and ! j Periodicals of that time will see I that the idea was firmly fixed in ■ it he minds of the Spaniards that the 'people ot the United States who | were unwilling to provide adequate I force tor National Defense could I not be seriously considered as suej i essfully opposing the large and I well trained army of Spain. And ' it was this idea, firmly fixed iut the 'minds of the Spanish people, that icaused them to continue with their policy of re-concentration camps land atrocities in Cuba, regardless of protests from the United States, j situation which eventually resulted in the Spanish War. There would have been no war j hall we possessed an adequate army and navy. The same situlation confronted the Nation at the outbreak of the World War. Had the .Unitiid States possessed an army and navy commensurate with jour population, wealth and resource*, Germany would never have resorted to unrestricted submarine w arfare and the agony of the World ' War would have been spared us. ( It would, therefore, seem to a 'straight thinking mind that there should be no argument on the expenditure of a part of the National income on what might well be termed "National Insurance,'' if by doling so we can in the future avoid I becoming involved in those melanicholy and bloody struggles which 'time and again have caused the civilization to totter. The horror land hideousness of war are infiniteily better known to a soldier who has been in the actual conflict than ■ could possibly be known to anyone'

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who has not experienced it, a''d through personal experience as well as study and thought, his belief as to the necessity of an adequate National Defense should control the policy of the Nation, instead ot suggestions made either by dreamers or by men and women who are actively Interested in the disintegration ot our National government. No one believes in his heart that the dawn of universal peace Is near at hand, or even approaching, and it in dallying with this thought we 'strip the Nation of its vital Nationlai Defenses and thereby cause its ruin, we have only ourselves as a | Nation to blame. ARRIVALS John T. Myers, the second, is the i name of the boy baby born to Mr. land Mrs. Herman H. Hyers 411 North Fifth street, at 11:55 o'clock Thursday night at the Adams Co-unty Memorial Hospital. The baby weighed six pounds, three and oneAialf ounces at birth and is the first child in the family. Mrs. Myers was formerly Miss. Mary Oman of Bluffton. Both mother and baby are getting along nicely. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Appelmau, 122 South Sixth street, are the parents of a girl baby born at the Adams County Memorial Hvepital Thursday. The baby, which is the third daughter in the family, was named Patty Lou. oHelp Jobless to Farm Wilmington, Del.) —(UP)—Under a plan said to have the endorsement of Governor C. Douglas Buck unemployed persons would be advanced state funds tp purchase farms and 'provided with seeds and equipment to raise their own food.

« * twenty years ago TODAY From the Dally Democrat File * W. B Hale of Geneva dies. Fred Luttman Is badly but net with gnn powder. Gart Shriber rt'os to Toledo to visit his new grimdson. S E Shamp takes possession ot new merribantile establishment in Fort Wayne. Krick and Tyndall is damaged by storm. Mrs. Verena Miller's house on Mercer Ave., is struck by lightning Mrs. Jacob Zahm returns to: Huntington after two weeks visit with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Tettman. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jacobbs of Wausiu, Wis.. are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mills. * Misses Gertrude and Agnes Omlor entertain telephone force. Frances Burrell returns to

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i ester after D»'» weeks visit with her grtndparenU, * Household Scrapbook ROBERTA_LEE_ v * The Bxthtub I T he Dorcelaln bathtub, or any •»- surface, can be cleaned by , rubbing with a woolen cloth d«mp- ' ened in gasoline. To remove dlseol- ' orattons. dissolve one teaspoon fill chloride of lime, put in vessel of cold water and boil for an hour. I Rub the .pots with this solution. Garden Hose The garden hose will probably l M t another season If the tiny leaks are -pointed <>n the outside I w tth pliable roofing P«ln’A Luncheon Dish Place the left-over fish in the < asserole with a mound of .trained cooked spinach. Cover with white I sauce and cheese, and put in the 1 oven to bake.

' 4 Answers To . Questions Below are the Ans Wl , r Test Questions p riß on Pag,, Twa 1 United State., 2. People <>f E J ' Asiatic blood. * 3. Ethelbert Nevin ' ‘‘“s f 5. Sydney. 6. Argentine, Brazil. « 7. Canada. 8. Wembley. 9. Shakespeare. i 10. Opium. r Lodge Members Aid n' Providence, R. i.- (U |j, a Phoebe bird bum i t# npM ' - j knocker on tin front door, il | gret. Lodge, in Smith cotrnj ■ 'members u.ed the rear J e'chisively until the bird , j, ' were able to fly.