Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 30, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 22 October 1925 — Page 6

Walkerton Independent Published Every Thursday by THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS CO. * Publishers of the ■ WALKERTON INDEPENDENT .NORTH LIBERTY NEWS . LAKEVILLE STANDARD THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIEB' Clem DeCoudres, Business Manager Charles M, Finch. Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year ...11,60 Six Months 90 Three Months , 60 TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton, Ind., as second-class matter. The close man generally finds his friends keep their distance. It’s a cinch that auto thieves will observe the muffler cut-out law. Picking up a horseshoe is not good luck if you pick it up with a tire. Genealogy wouldn’t be so bad if devotees knew how to pronounce it. “Women will follow a style.” says a writer. Well, yes; after a fashion. A cynic might call this an age of cliff dwellers who behave like cave men. After all, nothing on earth can move as rapidly as a thoroughly idle rumor. We should investigate whether Europe borrowed our money or just took it. A scientist has a new theory about aciatica, but that doesn’t make it hurt any less. One way for a woman to go to congress is to be the widow of a dead congressman. It isn’t the Bolsheviks that the world needs to worry about. It’s the Bolshevlktims. If at last the producers don’t pay for everything and maintain everything, who does? It is getting to be about as dangerous to climb an Alp as it is to go motoring on Sunday. A large majority of girls who declare they wouldn’t marry the best man on earth don’t Poland is after another loan tn New York. The more they “fund” the more they want to borrow. Paris need not worry. There are lots of worse things loose over there than Abyssinian leopards. The quickest way to make two blades of grass grow where one grew before is to plant a vegetable. In the old days there was nothing that corresponded exactly to the saxophone, unless it was the heaves. What we need In the United States Is a week-end that is not so destructive of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Nowadays an emporium can sell everything from flivver parts to permanent waves and still be known as a drug store. The phonograph, which has celebrated its forty-eighth birthday, is still going strong and bids fair to establish a record. This is the season of the year when many a man Imagines he looks well enough In knickers to be mistaken for a movie star. The persistent attempts of young - women to swim the English channel makes one a bit curious as to what’s on the otfr?r side. Wife: One who looks over the cut of sirloin brought home by a fatigued busband and remarks: "I suppose It will have to do.” It might be said that a discouraged phonograph Inventor who committed suicide thought be would see what was on the other side. A taxi driver was arrested for perjury, probably on complaint of a customer who didn’t look at the meter till the bill was paid. The bride In France steps on an egg to insure happiness. Another way is to learn how to prepare it properly along with a slice of ham. Juveniles think the brightest men are the ones who book circus day to fall on a Saturday, when school is not in session, or better yet, during vacation. The Treasury department has called in a lot of money experts to devise ways and means of making the dollar bill last longer. Why not put them in a Scotchmans pocketbook? The ex-crown prince has been prancing around In a uniform, but a small boy wears a cowboy suit without it meaning any more. If more emphasis were put on aviation as a science and as an industry, rather than as a sport, it would number fewer casualties. We’re expecting to see this line in a modern novel: “Elise appeared at the door, worn, weary and bedraggled, with two days’ growth of beard on the back of her neck.” Scientists just possibly found the reported cure for insomnia from observing the “wide-awake salesman” that the advertisement wanted. One of these days there will be a great revival of interest in croquet in this country when someone thinks up a pair of funny pants to go with it. According to the forest service of the United States Department of Agriculture. there were 92.000 forest fires in the United States during 1924. Too many by almost 100.0(0.

= i Seen and Heard • « I In Indiana For the third time within a year > the alleged slayer of Thad Fancher, ’ Crown Point attorney, heard the ver- ■ diet of a jury in a murder trial at Val- • paraiso and it was “acquitted.” : W. D. Robinson of Versailles was res elected president of the National Horsethief Detective association at the closing session of the sixty-fifth anI nual convention. H. N. Sherwood, superintendent of public instruction at Indianapolis, an- ] Bounces the next conference of rural education to be held at Auburn. October 31. The conference will be the f eighth of its kind to be held in the state. Frank Fuchs, Evansville banker, , serving a five-year term in the Atlanta Federal penitentiary for violation of the national bank act, has been f paroled on recommendation of the fed- . eral parole board at Washington. He had served twenty months. Mrs. Lorena Stephens of Fort i Wayne, has been appointed by Richt ard Lieber, director of the state department of conservation as a nonsalaried deputy game warden in Allen county. She is the first woman in Indiana to be selected for such an office. ? Four miles of new pavement has been opened to traffic on No. 10 just south of Carlisle, and traffic is now using nearly all new pavement between Indianapolis ami Anderson via Nos. 3~ and 11, it was announced in the state highway commission’s traffic bulletin I issued at Indianapolis A tabulation made of the accounts | in the office of Thomas S. McMurray, j commissioner of the Indiana insurance I department at Indianapolis, showed that during the fiscal year, which ended September 30, this department collected for the state in various fees the sum of $1,657,837.43. Investigation conducted for the past five years at the college of agriculture. University of Illinois, indicate Infected flocks of poultry probably are the principal source of avian tuberculosis in swine, Dr. Robert Graham told delegates to the Lakes state conference at Indianapolis on the eradication of tuberculosis in live stock. Raymond Powers, Terre Haute, said to have been a participant in the Spencer bank robberies several months ago, and who escaped from an operative of a detective agency while he was being taken from the state reformatory to Greencastle, to testify In the trial of one of his alleged accotnplices, was caught, Harry C. Webster, head of the agency, reported at Indianapolis. As a result of discussions had recently at the Indiana state conference on social work at Vincennes, a committee of six members. ap[»ointed at that conference, is expected to confer in the next few weeks with state officials. Including the governor, to discuss and study the question of a central selling agency or medium for the manufactured products of the state i»enal institutions, the state prison, the state reformatory and state farm. Damages of $50,000 and a restraining order to prevent further alleged interference with the operation of the Beech Grove motor busses was asked in a suit flled In Superior court at Indianapolis by the South Side Motor Coach company against fifteen citizens of Beech Grove. The complaint alleges that the defendants have encouraged persons to patronize the Beech Grove Traction company lines instead of the busses. Four members of the bandit gang which held up representatives of a Clinton bank on a highway between Clinton and St. Bernice August 25. and robbed them of the SII,OOO pay roll of the Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul railroad, are under prison sentences following their pleas of guilty in the Vermillion Circuit court at Newport. The four sentenced are Alonzo Stryker and John Dougherty, who were sentenced to ten years each in the Indiana state prison and fined SI .000 on pleas of guilty to auto banditry, and Mrs. Florence Stryker and Lena Smith, sentenced to the Indiana women’s prison for indeterminate terms on pleas of guilty to conspiracy. The government bureau of the census at Washington estimates the population of cities and towns in Indiana as follows: Anderson. 33.854: Bloomington. 12.589; Clinton. 13.642; Connersville. 12.454; Crawfordsville. 10.530; East Chicago, 45,580; Elkhart, 27,104; Elwood. 10.790; Evansville. 93.601; Fort Wayne. 97.846; Frankfort. 13.051; Gary. 76.870; Hammond. 50.386; Huntington, 15.914; Indianapolis. 358,819; Jeffersonville, 10.098; Kokomo, 36,855; Laporte, 17.540; Lafayette, 23.790; Logansport, 23,120; Marion. 26,274; Michigan City, 20.299; Mishawaka. 16,671 ; Muncie, 42,491 ; New Albany, 29,992; Newcastle, 16.955; Peru, 12.683; Richmond, 30,495; South Bepd, 80.091; Terre Haute, 71.071; Vincennes. 18,271 ; Whiting, 12.158. “I had hoped to escape, but am glad now I don't have to hide any more,” Mrs. Clara Carl, fifty-year-old murderess, thus accepted her capture by Columbus (Ohio) detectives. As a result of a resolution adopted i at the annual reunions of the Eighty- ■ fourth and Sixty-ninth Indiana volun- : teer infantry regiments at Richmond, I a marker will be erected near South Nin h and E streets to commemorate the site of Camp Wayne, where hundreds of Civil war soldiers were mobilized before they were sent to Indianapolis. Two former Gary public officials. ' <3yde Hunter and L. A. Barnes, re- . turned under parole from the federal prison at Atlanta, where they haye been serving sentence for complicity in the famous Gary liquor conspiracy. The nineteenth national dairy exposition. a show to visualize the economic importance of the American cow, was held at the Indiana state fair ground in Indianapolis. It was the annual exhibition arranged by the National Dairy association and more than two score affiliated associations.

i r B* a \ t fs hm J I I z J a if ■ T, \’" ■rasa i f® Bost - L ^l Ml JW ' -- I I<f i . I—Bryantl—Bryant Bauer, New York sculptor, and his statue uie ..ue cmel Justice Edward M. Wtiite wmeh is to be placed In his birthplace. New Orleans. 2—Orville Wright, inventor of the airplane, who has become chairman of the advisory committee to the new school of aeronautics in New York university. 3—Communists of London parading In protest because reckless grants of poor relief were checked.

NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS — Federation of Labor Spurns Briton’s Plea for Union With Russian Workers. By EDWARD W. PICKARD GREAT BRITAIN Ir alarmed by the spread of communism in that country, but Americans need not worry i about It over here, if the words of I President William Green of the American Federation of Labor nnd the cheers thnt greeted them In the federation's annual convention are a true Indication. Arthur A. Purcell, member of the British parliament, president of the In ternational Federation of Trades Unions and a fraternal delegate In the meeting In Atlantic City, told the con vention of hfs recent visit to Russia and his study of Industrial conditions there, and then advised the workers of America to establish the closest relations with the Russian workers. “We must not be afraid of new Ideas.” he said. "It has often struck me that, while the Americans have : been the most advanced, the most receptive. In Ideas concerning mechanical Inventions and business organisation, they have been slow in accepting new socle 1 and political Ideas. Just hs British workers have sent delegations to Russia, so I hope and trust the American Federation of Labor will do 1 the same. Do not be afraid of being ' called names. Were Abraham Lincoln, Samuel Gompers or “Gene Debs, those greot B<>ns of the American people, ever afraid of being called names or being reviled, maligned or persecuted?" Whereupon President Green arose | with fire in his eyes and said: “We In America know something of the teachI Ings of communism and the control the communist party exercises over the socalled Russian Internationale. We : know that Influence emanating from Moscow Is seeking, as it has always sought, not to co-operate with us but to capture- and control us. They call the officers and representatives of the American labor movement fakers, crooks, and scabs. Frankly they say ; they do not believe in collective bargaining. They do not see In any strike an opportunity to Increase wages, to shorten hours, to improve the condii tlon of the employment for workers. but they see in every strike an opportunity for revolution. “The Trade Union Educational legnue here in America, which Is a creature of the communist party, frank ly announces that its policy is to bore within the labor movement, to destroy It and substitute for our philosophy the philosophy of communism. > We are not ready to accept that, and we wish thnt our friend who has so kindly offered such frank suggestions might take back to the Russian Red Internationale this message: That the American labor movement will not affiliate with an organisation that preaches that doctrine.” Jumping to their feet, the delegates all shouted th’elr approval of Green’s declaration. In the opening of the convention Mr. Green voiced the determination of organized labor to fight for passage of the child labor amendment to the Constitution. The executive council reported an Increase of 13,000 In membership over last year. PRESIDENT COOLIDGE won new laurels for himself by his address efore the convention of the American Legion in Omaha. “Tolerance” was his main theme, and h» pleaded eloquently with his fellow Americans to drop every vestige of racial, religious and sectional Intolerance. “Lt seems clear” said he, “that the results of the war will be lost and we shall only be entering a period of preparation for another conflict unless we can demobilize the racial antagonisms, fears, hatreds, and suspicions, and create an attitude of toleration In the public ' mind of the peoples of the earth. If ! our country Is to have any position of bsidership, I trust it may be in that direction, and I believe that the place where It should begin Is at home. “If we are to maintain and perfect our own civilization, if we are to be of j Special Schools for Filipinos Great Need I Manila. —-That a special system of instruction is desirable for the nonChristian peoples of the Philippines, especially for the Moros, who Inhabit Mindanao and Sulu and who are Mohammedans, is the conclusion of a board of American experts, headed by Dr. Paul Monroe of Columbia university, which spent four months in making a survey of the educational system of the islands.

any benefit to the rest of mankind, we I must turn aside from the thoughts of destruction and cultivate the thoughts of construction. We cannot place our main reliance upon material forces, j We must reaffirm and reinforce our ancient faith In truth and justice, in charitableness and tolerance. We ; must make our supreme commitment to the everlasting spiritual forces of life. We must mobilize the conscience of mankind.” Mr. Coolidge paid warm tribute to the service rendered to the country : and to humnaity by the members of the Legion, and thus summarised remark ably well America's effort in the World war: “In the victory which was finally gained by you and your foreign comrades. you represented on the battlefield the united efforts of our whole people. You were there ns the result of n great resurgence of the old American spirit, which manifested Itseif In a thousand ways, by the pouring out of vast sums of moDey In credits and charities, by the organization and quickening of every hand in our ex tended industries, by the expansion of agriculture until It met the demands of famishing continents, by the manufacture of an unending stream of munitions and supplies, by the creation of vast fleets of war and transport ships, nnd. finally, when the tide of battle was turning against our associates, l»y bringing Into action a great armed force on sea nnd land of a character thnt the world had never seen before. . which, when It finally took Its place In I the Hm, MVtf CMUWd to :i'h*n<v, car- I ' tying the cause of liberty to a tri- ' I uniphant r«»nrhislon. You rrnfflrmed I the position of this nation In the esti- , mation of mankind. You saved civllI izHtlon from a gigantic reverse. No- 1 body savs now that Americans cannot fight.” Earlier In his address he said he was “a thorough believer in a policy of adequate military preparation, and after the cheers subsided he continued: “No doubt this country could. If It 1 wished to spend more money, make a better mUltarj force, but that Is only ; part of the problem that Confronts the ; government The real question Is whether spending more money to make , a better military force would really make a better country. 1 would he the last to disparage the military art. , It Is an honorable and patriotic calling of the highest rank. But I can see no merit In any unnecessary expenditure of money to hire men to build fleets and carry muskets when international relations nnd agreements permit the turning of such resources into the making of good roads, the building of better homes, the promotion of education and all the other arts of peace which minister to the advancement of human welfare.” The Presidential party, which included Mrs. Coolidge, returned at once to Washington, with a short stop in St. Louis. The Legion gathering was considerably stirred up over Colonel Mitchell and his air service charges and theories. Finally a compromise resolution was adopted which, without naming Mitchell, recommended the reorganization of the national defense under one cabinet officer with subdivisions of equal importance for land, sea and air. Philadelphia was awarded the convention of 1926 and It was decided to hold the meeting of 1927 in Paris, France. WITH Judge E. Finley Johnson of Michigan, a member of the Philippines Supreme court, presiding, the international judicial commission to Investigate the Shanghai riots opened its inquiry. The body Is composed of American. British and French judges, and, according to the Chinese, Is dominated by the British with the Americans as their dupes. Therefore the Chinese are violently opposing the investigation, asserting that there Is no chance of a fair decision. ALTHOUGH the allied and German I statesmen In conference at Locarno, Switzerland, are working earnestly [ and apparently amicably to draft a security treaty, they have not, at this writing, solved the main problem, the eastern frontiers of Germany. Briand insisted that France should have the right to guarantee the arbitration treaties between Germany and Poland and Germany and Czechoslovakia, and Chamberlain for Great Britain The board suggested that a special , ; department of the bureau of education he created to take charge and make a close study of school work among these peoples. The board’s report says: “The non-Christian peoples need a system of education that in many essential respects should differ from that developed for the great mass of the Filipino people. Only by such special treatment can the nonChristian peoples be brought up to the cultural and economic level of the Christian population.”

I supported him. but the Germans, Stresemann and Luther, objected, preferring England as the sponsor for the treaties. They also declared firmly ; that they would not agree to any provision in any of the treaties which would prevent Germany's seeking revision of the eastern frontiers. The security pact for the Franco-German frontier could be fixed up speedily except for one point—the right of Erance to send troops through German territory to aid her allies of the little entente In case they are attacked. ITALY'S Fascists are going ahead at a great pace. Last week they brought about an agreement of closest co-operation between the confederation of Industry, representing the employers, and the federation of Fascist labor unions, and then the grand council of the Faactstl framed constitutional changes giving the government absolute control of every phase of industrial. political and administrative activity. Une provision creates a board of compulsory arbitration for Industry and labor, nnd another makes strikes crimes punishable by death. The Fascist! also are conducting a violent campaign against Freemasons and there have resulted serious disorders In various cities, eapeelnlly Florence where several murders were committed. pill,. WILLIAM MITCHELL, on the A- J eve of court-martial for Insubord- । (nation, was ordered l>y the adjutant genera) of the army to appear before the naval court Investigating the airship Shenandoah. He showed up in full uniform and accompanied by his counsel. Congressman Frank Reid of Ulinols. The colonel objected to taking the oath but usked leave to read a brief statement. Admiral Jones, president of the court, refused to allow this and Mitchell still declining to testify, the court took the matter under advisement. The President's air board heard a large number of officers of the various services. The air officers were about equally divided for and against the proposition of a defense department with a separate air force. Rear Ad- . mlral Moffet, chief of the bureau of aeronautics, was an especially Interesting witness, giving hls opinion of , the air service as of the greatest value and telling the board at length what he thought should be done to Improve It. On Wednesday the board adjourned to attend the three days of air racing at Mitchel field. DEFYING the known Wishes of the President, the federal shipping board, after depriving the Fleet cor- . porution of its powers, removed Leigh C. Palmer from the presidency of the corporation and ordered Hurt Elmgr E. Crowley be elected to succeed him. Palmer was offered a vice presidency in charge of European affairs but declined and severed all connection with the corporation. Other changes of personnel were ordered by the board and carried out. Rear Admiral Cone, retired. vice president and general manager of the Fleet corporation, then resigned, telling Chairman O’Connor that "without regard to other considerations, I cannot, as a retired naval officer, serve any organization that defies the wishes and policies of the President of the United States.” FRENCH and Spanish forces in eastern Morocco have effected a Junction, the former advancing northward from Klfane and the latter moving south from Alhucemas bay. Thus the Riffs are completely surrounded. But the rainy season on which Abd-el-Krlm has been counting has come and the Europeans are finding their operations Increasingly difficult. Jules Steeg, minister of justice, has been selected as resident general of French Morocco to succeed Marshal Lyautey, who resigned. In Syria the rebellious Druses have been thoroughly routed by the French tanks and bombing planes. JUST as the world’s championship series between the Washington and Pittsburgh ball teams was opening, all lovers of the national game were saddened by the word that Christy Mathewson, one of the most famous and best loved of all pitchers, was dead at Saranac Lake, N. Y. “Big Six,” as he was called, succumbed to tuberculosis which attacked him after he was gassed in the World war. A bill providing for separate schools for boys and girls in the departments of Mindanao and Sulu, where nearly all the inhabitants are Mohammedans, has been introduced in the hou. e of representatives by J. P. Melencio. son in-law of General Aguinaldo. Co-edu cation in the elementary schools of Mindanao has not produced good re suits, in the opinion of Representative Melencio, why believes the enactment of the bill into law will greatly Im prove the public school system among the Moros.

OCXDCOOOCIOOOOCOCKD^^ j HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” OOOCXXXDOOOCOCJOOCXDCK^^ i (©, 1925. Western Newspaper Union.) THE CANCER GERM CO GREAT Is the popular horror of cancer that any new “discovery,” whether of cause or cure, Is eagerly grasped. Naturally, the greater the scientific authority back of the claim the greater the amount of belief accorded to it. So it Is not strange that the report of a newly discovered cancer germ by two well-known scientists of London found a place on the front pages of practically all our prominent newspapers. The interest In the subject Is Intense among scientific men as well ns laymen. Most of the claims to startling discoveries of the cause or cure of cancer come from unknown or obscure men, whose previous knowledge or reputation does not justify any confidence In their ability to add anything of value to our present knowledge of ■ this dread disease. But Mr. Barnard and Doctor Gye are both men of high ■ scientific standing and any claim from them is deserving of the most careful consideration. But science has little regard for authority. nnd even the greatest men In I the scientific world must be able to prove their statements in order to have them accepted by their fellows. So the claims made by these two men I must be confirmed by positive proof and Indorsed by others before they can be accepted. Just what. In newspaper English, ; Is their claim? Like practically all advance In scientific knowledge. It I rests on the work of their prede- I cessors. It has long been known that । cancer could be produced by trans- ■ planting n small bit of cancerous । tissue from one animal to a healthy j animal. Fifteen years ago Rous of . the Rockefeller Institute found that the serum from a cancerous growth i Injected Into a chicken would cause j cancer, even after the serum had been strained through a Berkfleld filter. | This filter la so fine as to strain out ; any germ large enough to be visible * through an ordinary microscope. So I Rous concluded that If this chicken cancer was caused by a germ. It must j be one so small aa to be Invisible, nr ns bacteriologists say, a “filterable germ.” Now Mr. Barnard, by using | the ultra-microscope, an Instrument I In which the object Is photographed ; by means of ultra-violet rays, has | foun 4 very small round objects, ) which he claims are the germs of chicken cancer, while Doctor Gye, from experiments on fowls, has con- I eluded that this germ will cause cancer. ■ Even If the germ which Barnard has found Is shown by further study j : to be always present in chicken can- । cer, it must still be proved that it Is the cause and under what conditions it will grow. BOOKS ON THE RUNABOUT CHILD W/TANY books and pamphlets have been written on the care and feeding of Infants. Mach has also been written about the child of school I age. But between these two groups there has until recently been a gap. I The child of from two to six has not ! even had a name by which It could be distinguished. Too old to be called a baby, too young to be called a school child. It had no distinct name until, I a few years ago. Dr William Palmer i of San Francisco very happily designated him “the runabout child.” The name also tells why children of this particular age have been largely overlooked. The enormous death rate among children In the first two years of life and the need of teaching mothers and nurses how to feed and care for Infants have kept all the Infant welfare organizations busy. ; The need of controlling contagious diseases in the schools and of sorting out those school children who were defective in sight, hearing and mental i ability Is completely absorbing tne school health workers. The child that Is neither a baby nor a school child has been left to take care of Itself. This lack has been met in the last two years by the publication of a number of excellent books and pamphlets which are now available to mothers desiring information on this most im- ! portant and critical period of child life. Some of the best are listed here, so that they can ne easily secured: Books. The Health of the Runabout Child. Dr. William Palmer Lucas. Macmillan Company, New York. $1.75. The Healthy Child From Two to Seven. Dr. Francis H MacCarthy. j Macmillan company. New York. $1.75. The Pre-School Child. Dr. Arnold Gasell. Houghton, Mifflin company, Boston. $1.90. Parenthood and Child Nurture. Edna Dean Boker. Macmillan company, New York. $1.50. Mother and Child. Dorothy Canfield. Henry Holt & Co., New York. $1.50. Pamphlets. Child Care In the Pre-School Age. Mrs. Max West. Federal Children's Bureau Publication No. 30. Ten cents. The Runabouts in the House of Health. American Child Health Association, 370 Seventh avenue. New York. Fifteen cents. My Little Child’s Health. American Child Health Association, 370 Seventli avenue. New York. Ten cents. Married to a Tree A Hindu in the Punjab cannot be legally married a third time. When, therefore, he wants a third wife he is married to a tree, so that when he actually does take another wife she counts as his fourth. Two Things to Mind “It ought to be easy,” said Uncle I Eben, “to lead a safe and peaceable j life. All you really has to do Is to ’ mind de Ten Commandments an’ de . traffic signs.”—Washington Star.

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