Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 218, Decatur, Adams County, 14 September 1932 — Page 5

MEIN l| !£ s SPEECH —- — •., rniHip;* l ' <| - • ;lt Unal Medmu |!. ( oiileii iue ■ ■ . ■■ ■ ~,, ■ ■ •r I ''."' 'u,::ni..t. ...o--fbU.it>. ■ :n J«'O" '■ • V... ■ 1 11,1 thp ■ ■

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I THEY’RE HERE! Lovely New I Knit Dresses >ave everything you could .jEgp xjjay for in a dress. They’re wear- :{®L K. practical and perfectly ad or- Ag'ftlifcx r Sizes f; ’ Women and Misses. 13 TjSg jE All colors. th." Kill! QQ JAR Wool Jersey J ||s||crem Too or Three Piece Style Hiv” H'i-- $2.98 B> ■Annora W 00l Jersey d* 1 QJT ■ Blouses .. vLvO tSSjJw 'Wjl/il/ji ■ Slip Over Sweaters d* 1 IWI H\eu Knit styles. O 1 ,Uv /;>,’/? S * -> Sale of iA? lingerie J, -k . Bloomers. Stepins, Chemise Ui/ fa. J and Vests. We made a for- ■ ' ’ tunate purchase from one of Ml Ijkw J le *d ,n g manufacturers of underwear. ■ | \ Act quickly as the values are truly sensa ■ tional. Every garment is perfectly made Si / Yk a new ra y° n cloth. Tailored and Lace ■ / V » i trammed styl*s in pink and tearose colors. ■ / q | f sizes! 49c ■ GIRLS BLOOMERS—Made of good quality Knit Ray«i. or slip-cloth—Colors. Pink or Black ‘ires 1 to 1 I years — *>V RABY GOODS SPECIALS CRIB BLANKETS, solid color. Pink. Blue. White. rite 30x40. each 39c — Also site 30x36 at 25c Knitted Rompers, wool and rayon. Blue. Peach. Green. 39c 9"by Shirts, foldover style, sites 1 to 4, each Knitted Training Pants, plain white, good quality, ea. 29c Outing Kimonos. Pink or Blue trim Baby Dresses, Lace or Applioue trim 29c to 50c Past Color Broadcloth Rompers Raby Diapers. Birdeye cloth, size 27x27, per dozen 88c Made of Best Quality (’Vxi Suiting in the. new ca ■■ ■ E ’’ I IVI det blue color! Guar- SB® ». ffi anteed fast colors. wLjw ft " kil'lD'c New st y ,e . belted, with JF W ' u "2i K Oil lib elastic knee. E fca Sizes 8-10-12-14-16-18-20. Special low price "omens Full Fashion “Real-Silk” z'f'sX HOS IE R Y / \\ - Real Silk Hosiery— /' A ■B sheer chiffon with f j B E 1 «... P ,eot t°P. or service /' ?/ Zv ME I H weight with lisle i&li'Ml' fl 3■ £ ■ top. All the new BW ( / K Illi colors, includ- BfV \A 111 B| ■ ingthe darker / # )\/ My ILy bfowoSizes B'/ a to 10'/ 2 . EE r Niblick & Co SALE PRICES ARE CASH PRICES.

ganixed work against it began about I 2T> year* ago, Dr, FHhbeln told of I the Increase In numiter of tubercti lost* beds. clinic and olhui preven I tative ind carattre phaie* ot the tight. i Complete eradication ot the dis J | ease can not be dbtaihed tn a day.; nor even tn a decade, but forward • I planning and orgaulzati n should' I steadily decrease the mortality rutei I of thia plague, the doctor laid. I Particular emphasis was placed on the necessity of keeping children away from persons known to be at-1 flirted with the diMMae and careful i selection of foods was stressisi, — ~ - MAKES OPENING ADDRESS AT TOPEKA, KAN. ii — H CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ’ and * strengthen the cooperative movement. 6 The plan must not he eoer I 1 live. It must be voluntary and th”: J individual producer should nt all ■ times have the opportunity of non ’ participation if he desires 1 Roosevelt declared that before putting the plan into effect "I i would reorganize the United Slat' ~ U department of agriculture, looking •I toward the administrative ma 'I ehincry needed to build a program} ’ of national planning " "1 should be the last person in the world to become a harsh ami 1 I thoughtless critic of a department I that has done so many gmal things" i the governor explained. ' But I I know enough of government ami i of the ways of government to know that the growth ot a department is often irregular, illogical ! and haphazard." "It is always easy." he said, "to add to a department. Additions l mean more jobs. But to cut away unnecessary functions, eliminate i useless jobs or redirect routine activities toward more fruitful pur-: I poses is a task that must be , undettaken." ’ Pointing out that he favored a

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER U, 19.32

Dew Cancellation and Loan Aim of "Professor C. Skinner" j j t ♦♦♦* ♦ ♦ • p ’ i ’ Masquerading Visit of Bank of England’s Governor Seen as Forerunner of War Debts Parley. Proposal for Five-Biliion-Dollar Loan Discussed with American Bankers. i - - I I ' 'S < I B • bJpSfL I Gt A 1 a?. ’ B SHm >5 Jbf i 6DEKI jBS x 'jpF I That formal diplomatic negotiation* between the United State* and Great Britain with a view to war debt* cancellation will re*ult from the vi»it of Montagu Norman, Governor of the Bank of England, to thi* country, i> a pretty >afe bet, according to an official of unimpeachable authority The my»teriou. British financier came here tome time ago a* "Profe..or Clarence Skinner" and, when recogni*ed, announced he wa. merely tak.ng a re.t for hi* health. However, it ha. been di.clo.ed that Norman has had secret conference* with leading American financier* and government official, before whom he la.d a 6-pomt program calling for the reduction or cancellation of war debt, and a hve-billion dollar short term loan to Europe, among other thing., it I. believed in many quarters that Norman came to an understanding with Secretary ot the Treasury Ogden Mill, regarding the resuination of war debt payment, by Great Britain. It is significant that no provi.ion has been made in the British budget for the next payment, due on December 15 Regarding the purpose of the Norman visit, Lloyd George, warfime Premier ot Britain .ays I will not favor any British Government which default* on war debts to the American p-ople. I would prefer to sell our last shirt. rather than default.”

definite policy looking to the planned use of the land. Roosevelt asserted that "such planning designed primarily to gain a better, and less wasteful distribution of j agricultural productive effort, in evitably will point the way to readjustments in the population in general." "The pendulum is swinging back from the intense concentration of population in the cities. We know the possibilities for the greater! ease and comfort of modern rural ind small town living. This does not mean a back to the land move-; I merit tn the ordinary sense of a | I return to agriculture. It means ■ definite efforts to decentralise I tndustry." The governor asserted Hurt a third process of permanent relief; for agriculture can conte through national leadership in the reducI tion and more equitable distribxt--i tion of taxes. "With respect to this,” he de-| i dared. "I propose to exert through | the presidency, as I have through l I the governorship, such influem ■" as I can. in favor of a national movement to reorganize local gov-; ’ eminent in the direction ot eliminating some of the tax burden i which now bears so heavily on ■ farms." The nominee said there won too many taxing districts, too many local units of government, too many unnecessary offices and, functions. "The governmental underbrush, which has sprouted for years should be cleared away." Roosevelt said Tlie governor cited the necessity of it finam ing farm mortgages i‘ tlio agrarians of the nation ar" to enjoy prosperity. He pointed out that while the last session ot congre.-s did a great deal toward , financially stabilizing hanks, rail I roads and industry, ' nothing was done by that body., I "towaids removing the destructive menace of debt from farm homes."; "It is my purpose, if elected. he promised his audience, “to direct all the energy of which I ; am capable to the formulation of. definite projects to tfclieve this! distress.” 1 "Specifically." he asserted, 11 am prepared to insist that federal credit be extended to banks, insitr ance. or loan companies, or other) corporations or individuals which 1 hold farm mortgages among their made on the condition that every, . assets hut that these credits be, ■ reasonable assistance be given to ! the mortgagors where the loans I are sound, with the purpose of i preventing foreclosure.’’ Means of bringing about, through ■ governmental effort, a substantial ! reduction in the difference be- ' tween the prices of the things the farmer sells and the things he buys, was declared by the governor to be an immediate necessity. "One' way of attacking this disparitv. ' he said, is by restoring international trade through tariff I readjustments in support of a clear, comprehensive plan for

solving, at least in part, some of the farmers’ difficulties. The governor recalled the efforts! of various groups in the interest of marketing surplus farm crops. "Support for the trial of some plan to put the tariff into effect I seems to lie found everywhere ; except in the administration at Washington." he said. "This official lack of sympathy.” Roosevelt asserted, "has probably done more to prevent the development of concrete, generally accepted plans than any other single , force.” He charged that this attitude was more than a failure to assume leadership. "It is an absolute repudiation of responsibility", he observed. The governor called to the at-j tention of his listeners his record | on agriculture as chief executive of New York state. Reminding. ' them that "on my part. I can standi ; on my own records and on the ; policies I have just set forth.” | "On the opposite side,” he explained. "you have the long record of the present administration." Roosevelt then charged that the depression in agriculture 1 > l?an in 1921. Republican leaders first sought to belittle the split of agri- | culture and later offered the Fordncy McCumber tariff as a remedy, he said. Charging that the Fordney McCumber tariff strangled the norrn--lal trade in firm surplusses, the governor said farm leaders in 1922 worked out a program tor equality in agriculture. "They moved in the direction of a Republican agricultural confer-j ’ erne to consider it. The confer-; once met. It took the amazing position that production should be reduced to the demands of the domestic market by the cheerful means, it appeared of ‘starving i out’ the farmers who had formerly : exported to Em ope. -It is a matter f c mmon knowledge that the president, then th" secretary of commerce, was not . without influence in the determination of this result," Roosevelt ' said. Roosevelt went back to the Coolidge regime io seek material for his attack on the present administration. “The claim that the Republican discriminatory tariff methods ire i a benefit to the farmer is a cynical and pitiless fraud." he declar- • ed. . The nominee demanded that > farm board speculation in snri pluses be ended, insisting that its f ntabilizing operations have put a millstone around the neck of the ii cooperatives, in addition to squand--1 ering hundreds of millions of the ■ tax payers money. He summed up the Republican >, farm program with the declara- -■ tion that: "The present administration - asks farmers to put their interr ‘ ests in the hands of their bitterest f | opponents — men who will go to i any and all lengths to safeguard r i and strengthen a protected few."

Thnn he cloned with, "The time has come. The hour has ntruck." Garner Meets Train Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 1< —(U.R> The special train carrying Govenor Franklin D Roosevelt on his transcontinental tour resumed its westward journey at 7:<R a. m.i today after a brief stop in Kan ! sas City. The presidential nominee was asleep when the train reached Kansas City and It was decided not to awaken him to make an appearance before the crowd gathered on the station platform. .lohn Nance Garner, ruddy and smiling vice-presidential nominee, boarded the special shortly before', the train pulled out for Topeka. | where Roosevelt was scheduled today to deliver one of the major speeches of Ills campaign. Garner had arrived in another special from Texas a few minutes after the Roosevelt train came In. "How's Roosevelt?" was Gar ner's first query. He was assured the New York governor was In perfect health. HOU) HEALTH STATION HERE ciiNTINI EH I'KOM t’AGI? ONE ! At night bedtime should come so? regularly that the child will ox •sect it. He should sleep in a bed by himself, windews open, and lights out and should not he coaxed to go to sleep. "■To get the most good from sleep the child should he undressed and in his own bed. Sleeping at the motion pictures or in an automobile d es not take the place of rest in bed. To deprive the child of sleep is as bad as to deprive him of food." o Huckleberry Pickers on Job Vancouver, Wish. — (UP) — lllordes of huckleberry pickers have swept across Peterson Prairie to the huckleberry fields of the famed Twin Butte area. Hundreds of families have set tip crude summer camps and the pickers c ntinued to arrive at the rate of 25 to 30 a day. A big crop was reported. o- —»—_ Japanese Diet to Convene Tokio. (U.RI — The vernacular press understands that the third extraordinary session of the Imperial Japanese Diet, the "Teikoku Gikai,” probably will be convened soon Io consider legislation for farm relief and general improvement of the economic status of the middle and lower classes. Draft I bil's now are being prepared. o Get the Habit—Tratte at Hom*

TOMORROW - - - - And It’s New Ways What discoveries are around the corner — what things, undreamed of today, will he commonplaces tomorrow? The past has seen products once rare and unknown become widespread and familiar. The future will see the process repeated. Advertising is the driving force which brings about these changes in your life. For when a new product is developed, its distribution is limited until the advertiser tells you about it. When the product is known, you and all your neighbors form a great potential market, permitting quantity production. Economies in manufacture result—and the article comes within the reach of everybody. It has happened before—and it will happen again in the same way. Read the advertisements! They are of vital importance to you. Your homes and habits are changed by advertised goods. What things novel, interesting, modern— will be offered next? You will find new horizons in the advertising pages of this newspaper. Decatur Daily Democrat

DOUMER SLAYER IS EXECUTED i CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE • ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦• ground with a powerful hose to prevent morbid sight seers from , dipping handkerchiefs In the blood. Barely half an hour before his j execution, according to French law and custom, the assassin was awakened by his guard and lawyers and told that he must die. He said not a' word, but dressed calmly. Gorgouloff said a prayer In Russian, as he was taken to the prison chapel, repeating the words 'after a Russian priest. He then; went to be prepared for his final i toilet. As his hands were being; manacled and the back of his head shaved tn better expose his flesh to the sharp knife of "the widow," Gorgouloff turned to his guards and said: “I am not a royalist. 1 am not a communist. I commend myselfj to Russian peasants." He then, started to rave about hia "idea,"} and shouted to those around him "1 hope my hoy will become a doctor, and carry out the princi-l pies of my idea." His wife is ex-j j pecting a child soon. The Russian died courageously,} I with the same twisted grin on his' I face that he often displayed durI ing his trial. LOCAL PEOPLE ATTEND SESSION 1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE , furnished by Rev. E. T. Thomas: ! of Dunkirk, and by the Liberty , Center Baptist church. The gener- . al conference was conducted by Rev. i Jewell at 3:20 o’clock this afterj noon. The evening session will be term- - ed the Young People’s session and s Lloyd Hendricks of Newcastle will ? be the chairman. During the meetr ing the stringed orchestra from the s Durnkirk church will furnish the - music, and the election of officers ,- will he held. An address will also 5 be given. The program for Thursday will be as follows: Morning Session r Devotions Rev. W. T. Chowder. 1 Montpelier. ■ Address. "The Gospel For All i People" Dr. S. G. Huntington 1 Special Music Mrs. C. E. Bell and r Mrs. A. B. Brown, of Decatur. ■-1 Missionary Address. p Address, “All Power is Given Unto t Me" Rev. J. W. Kinnett, Newcastle. Afternoon Session * Devotions Rev. 0 Whitesell,

Warren Reports of committees. Election of Officers. Closing address, "Lo. I Am With You Alwaya" Dr. H. N Spear, Bluffton. o Huge Skeleton* found Stodkton, Cal. — (UP) — Three skeletons, one seven feet long, have 'been uncovered by Harry T. Sanford, College of the Pacific archaeologiat, and a crew of men engaged in excavating an Indian burial mound near Garwood Ferry bridge. They are believed to be the largest Indian skeletons ever unearthed in 1 California. ■ — Hutchinson Family Glad To Be On Land Angmagssalik, Greenland, Sept. 11—(U.R)— The "Flying Hutchinsons" were safe on land today, and iglad of it. The eight persons aboard the am phibian "City of Richmond" were brought here at 3:30 p. m. Tues 'day, local time, by the trawler Lord I Talbot, which rescued them from ilkersuak Fjord after their plane i was forced down and wrecked at I sea. Hutchinson revealed that he enicountered a blizzard while flying 'from Julianehaab to Angmagssalik Sunday, and that his plane was wrecked when he came down on the sea. The Lord Talbot was the first vessel to answer Hutchinson’s IS. O. S. signals, and eventually i found the "Flying Family."

Bib- • Br . Hear ) David Goldstein Speak from a Radio Broadcast Auto FRIDAY, SEPT. 16—7:30 o’clock C ORNER MADISON & FOURTH STS. J Mr. Goldstein has a message of great interest to you. You are invited to hear him.

PAGE FIVE

Greenland residents familiar with the dangerous moods of northern waters marvelled that the Hutchinson party, which Included Mrs. Hutchinson and her two young daughters, escaped injury. Million Cabbage Plant* CHICAGO (U.R) Employes of ' the International Harvester plant have 1,000,000 cabbage plants ami ’ 1,000,000 tomato plants under cultivation on 2,300 acres of Illinois ground. 1,000 of which arc in the Chicago area. oAfternoon Hour Dangerous Harrisburg. Pa.. — (UP) — One I hour in the aftermoon, between four and five o'clock, proved the most dangerous to pedestrians and motor vehicle operators in the first six months ot’ 1932 in Pennsylvani i. Saturday was the most dangerous driving day. OLD AT 40? Beware Kidney Acidity Thousands past 40. and many far 1 younger, suffering and losing oner- ' gy from Getting Up Nights. Backache, Stiffness. Leg Pains. Nervousness. Acidity or Burning, caused by poorly functioning Kidneys I or Bladder, should use Cystex t| (pronounced Sisstex) specially pre- ’ I pared for these troubles. Works i ' fast, circulating through system in j 15 minutes. Only 67c at druggists, f Guaranteed to fix you up or money back on return of empty package. * —Callow & Kohne.