Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 22, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 29 October 1925 — Page 6

Walkerton Independent Published Every Thursday by THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS CO. " Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS [_A KEV HIE STANDARD THB ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES Clem DeCoudres, Business Manager Charles M. Finch. Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear.. ..JI.S9 Blx Months 90 Three Months..... 10 TERMS IN ADVANCE I Entered at the post office at Walkerton. Ind , as eecond-clase matter. American film actresses marry In haste and repeat at leisure. Speaking of foreign relations. Uncle Sam wants to make France ante. Still, if there were no crooked lawyers, what would crooked clients do? Two things of short duration are a temporary loan and a permanent wave. The most convincing arguments are those bearing out your own theories. So far this year the grade crossings have won practically all their contests. The old idea that feminism hadn’t a leg to stand on has been completely exploded. Being on the right track is correct. But if you just stop here, you’ll get run over. All some people want to know is whether it Is being done. If it Is, they'll do it. One of life’s mysteries is how cantaloupes can bat around .208 and still retain a following. Narrow-minded people are especially annoying if your conscience agrees with what they say. All that a man wants to know about a summer resort is that it “promises an active social season.” Wonder if the huckleberry crop is as short as the piece of pie in the restaurant would indicate? Money may not bring happiness, but does give you a wider choice as to I what you will worry about. "Marconi says it will soon be possible to telephone anywhere on earth." Provided the line isn't busy. About the only person who can genuinely sympathize with the President is the average baseball umpire. I - ■ I Expansion is the order of the day. < Virtually every city in the country Is < planning to enlarge its police force. i There Isn’t much wrong in a coun- < try where 83 per cent of the general < complaint concerns women’s’ styles. < Relatives are people who come to visit you when the weather gets too hot for them to do their own cooking. The only thing that keeps a lot of folks from becoming real “soap box’’ orators is that they are afraid of soap. Officers searching for a fellow who Btole ten ukuleles haven’t found him, but are pretty sure they know the motive. An Englishman has invented a machine to produce sleep. In this country we are still depending on senate ' debates. The Illinois girl who recovered a needle she swallowed 13 years age can trade it in as a down payment on a lipstick. < He would be a very clumsy murderer who could not develop a little pris- < on madness to save his neck from the gallows. । A good joke always outlives its gen- ’ eration, and few if any persons in our time have seen a bull break up a picnic. ■ < Any young American can be counted 1 on as destined to be a success if he brings home the bacon as surely as he does poison ivy. You may beat the locomotive a dozen times, but if you lose on the thirteenth you get no credit for past performances. The nasty magazines are not so depressing as the knowledge that there are enough people of that kind to support them. It is reported that soviet Russia ii experimenting with disease germs as an instrument of offensive warfare. If anybody can think of anything more offensive, let him speak. An expedition from South America reports having found a tribe of 22 Indians able to talk only with their arms. It must be most distressing for the squaw who has neuritis. Steamships on the English channel this summer have to be careful not to run down any young women trying to swim across. The first lesson in thrift is to learn how to throw accurately into your waste basket circulars from the oil stock sharks. With the price of rubber soaring (““and gasoline steadily climbing, the '^Motorist gazes apprehensively at the ^*.“free air” signs and wonders how long they will last. Foresight is that rare quality In man which moves the occasional climber ip the ladder to success to rig himself >ut with a parachute. Startling contrasts in dress patterns re said to be coming. Wonder how inch material will be required to !n--a startling contrast. A radio lecture has been broadcast om the bottom of the ocean. Somejng tells us that the problem of coiniting the saxophonist Is nearing a lution.

♦— * * ; INDIANA, ‘BREVITIES I I Dr. G. O. Erni, sixty-three years old, a physician of New Albany forty years, died suddenly of heart disease while at the bedside of a patient. Mrs. Stanley of Liberty was elected state president of the W. C. T. U. at the annual convention held at Connersville. It was the sixth time she had been elected to the office. Architects, contractors, engineers and building craftsmen will meet at Purdue university in Lafayette October 29 for the third annual state building conference. Gov. Ed Jackson and state officials also will attend. Mrs. Anna Skibo was convicted of first-degree murder by a jury in the Laporte County Circuit court at Laporte^ Life Imprisonment was the jury’s recommendation. Mrs. Skibo was convicted of the slaying of her husband. Henry Beemer, age seventy-six, retired fanner of Floyd county, living at New Albany, who has been eking out an existence in New Albany, had $14,167 on his person, a commission named to investigate his sanity found. A SIO,OOO Liberty bond and $4,1(57 in bills were in a sack sewed inside his clothing. The case of Mary Helen North against Margaret North, administrator of the estate of William North, suit to set aside the will of William North, came to a close at Winchester when the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, setting aside the will and giving the plaintiff judgment for $15,000. Mrs. Frank J. Sheehan of Gary was elected president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs at the close of the convention held at Hammond. About four hundred attended the anniversary dinner, which marked the close of tbe convention. It was voted to change the time of the convention from fall to spring. Walter Hughes, jailed in connection with his efforts to hold the office of auditor of Blackford county against Miss Ruth Werber, was released. The court’s order restrains Mr. Hughes from further interference with Miss Werber’s efforts to discharge the duties of the office and also holds up payment of salary to Mr. Hughes for the time he served. The body of Senator Samuel M. Ralston was laid to rest in the cemetery of his old home town of Lebanon. Rev. Jean Milner, Presbyterian minister, conducted brief services in the Ralston home at Indianapolis. Thirteen j United States senators and many state officials attended the services. Immediately afterward the funeral cortege came to Lebanon by automobile. The third annual builders' conference. a meeting of architects. contractors, engineers and craftsmen, will be held at Purdue university at Lafayette, October 29, and men prominent in the building field and a number of state officers, including Gov. Edward Jackson, will attend the one-day meeting and appear on the program. The purpose of the gathering Is to discuss building. The state board of tax commissioners set the tax levy for the Indianapolis city sanitary district at 5.5 cents on each SIOO of taxable property and reduced levies set by officials of seven other taxing units in various parts of the state. Tax levies reduced were those of Monroe county, the city of Bloomington and Perry townships, Monroe county; Boone county. Boonville and Boone township. Boone county. Leaders of patriotic organizations in Indiana, Ohio and Illinois attended a dinner at the Hotel Severin in Indianapolis, the Federated Patriotic Societies of the G. A. R. being host, with Mrs. Catherine Mcßride Hoster, national president. and Mrs. Edna Pauley, national instituting and installing officer of the Woman's Relief corps, as honor guests. Heads of various Indiana organizations also attended the affair. Long faces were much in evidence in statehouse circles in Indianapolis following the announcement of the new salary schedule in which many substantial salary reductions were provided. Numerous members of the state’s official family whose salaries fell under the pruning knife in the new schedule called at the office of the state board of accounts, where the committee had held its sessions, and sought to console others in the same plight. A World war veteran of the Canadian army shot and killed the wife of his best friend, with whom he had made his home for fifteen years, and then killed himself in their home in Indianapolis. The dead woman was Mrs. Lydia Stroud, thirty-two years old, wife of William G. Stroud. She was the mother of two children. The man who killed her and later committed suicide was Clarence Peterman. Following a spirited contest at South Bend in which Lafayette was opposed by Crawfordsville, the former was chosen as the 1926 convention city of the Indiana Young People’s conference. Lafayete won by a margin of 221 votes. Isaiah P. Watts, age eighty-five, died at his home in Winchester of a complication of diseases following a long illness. He was a veteran of the Civil war. served as representative in the i Indiana legislature on? term. He was doorkeeper of the United States ' senate from 1906 to 1910. Resisting extradition when found by Sheriff Fred Karr of Rochester, at Hegewisch, 111., Mrs. Stella Hackett Roberdee, alleged kidnaper of her children, remained at liberty under bond upon refusal of Illinois au- ‘ thorities to release her. Frances, age seventeen ; Esther, age sixteen, and Charles, age fourteen, daughters and son of Mr. and Mrs. Giles Phillips, living near Oakland City, are in the hospital suffering from injuries caused when a southbound Big Four passenger train struck their sedan.

a. > - -adME 5 Wink JWEMiil'ir I—View during the conflagration that destroyed the Japanese parliament buildings, 2 —Vice President Dawes, addressing New Jersey National Guardsmen at Elizabeth and renewing his attack on the senate rules. 3—Major General Lejeune, commandant of the marine corps, laying wreath on statue of Count Pulaski on one hundred and forty-sixth anniversary of the Polish patriot’s death.

NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS — Allied and German Foreign Ministers Agree at Last on the Security Pact. By EDWARD W. PICKARD S' EOURITY for western Europe ap- ( pears to have been achieved by the agreement reached last week by the conference of allied and German foreign ministers and other statesmen .at Locarno, Switzerland. Great tact 1 and a spirit of conciliation were dis- ' played by all concerned and obstacles that for a time seemed insurmountable were climbed over or removed. The most serious of these were the demands of Poland, but Poland’s political and financial position Is exceedingly shaky, and so she was brought into line by pressure from those on whom she depends. Germany was most insistent on a provision exempting her from application of article 16 of the covenant upon her joining the League of Nations, but was persuaded to accept a “gentleman's agreement” by which the allies promised to use their good offices to obtain for her this exemption and also to provide eventually for colonial mandates. It was agreed that the Polish and | Czech arbitration treaties with Germany' should be guaranteed by tbe league, France undertaking to look after the Interests of her eastern allies. I if those allies get into a quarrel with Germany, France is to have the right to send troops through German terri- : tory to their aid only if tbe league council unanimously declares Germany at fault. France gains in the agreement a guarantee of her eastern frontier with assurance of safety from attack from ! the east; and this presumably will j make it possible for her to decrease , her armed forces and so reduce sub- , gtantially her military budget. Great j Britain and Italy guarantee that the ' Rhine frontier shall not be disturbed. Germany is to be readmitted to the ! concert of European powers on an ; equal footing; the Cologne zone is to ! be evacuated, conditions in the Rhineland are to be ameliorated and the . status of the Saar region is to be reI considered; rehabilitation of Germany's commercial aviation industry I is to be permitted, and there will be \ no further fear of sanctions for her failure to fulfill the Versailles treaty. After the drafts of the agreements had been approved by President Von Hindenburg and the German cabinet, 1 Premier Mussolini, who is also foreign minister of Italy, went to Locarno to sign for his country as guarantor with Great Britain of the security pact. Only the drawing up of the four arbitration treaties remained to be done, and it was planned to have all the documents ready for signing by Saturdaynight. Too much credit cannot be given tbe statesmen who have brought about those pacts, and when the • treaties go into effect the whole civi--1 lized world will breathe a sigh of rei lief. PRESIDENT COOLIDGE has let it be known that the attitude of the administration toward foreign loans is based on the principle that those nai tions that have funded their debts to I the United States will be more likely I to obtain loans over here than the na- ' tions that have not made such settlements. This view is confirmed by , : statements of leading bankers. , ' It was admitted by the White House . spokesman that the government has no legal authority over the making of loans to foreign governments, but it was pointed out that where loans are 1 to be floated by public subscription it has been the practice for American 1 hankers to make inquiry of the State ! department as to whether there could be any objection to such loan. No mention was made at the White I House of any individual European na- - i tion and what was said there was not r believed to have been aimed, in any I direct sense, at least, at France, al- > though certain reports have indicated ; that loans which France was seeking i to negotiate in this country probably must be delayed on account of that । Loot So Large, Thieves Found No Sale for It ' i Philadelphia.—A tale of an alleged ! secret rendezvous in the Russian quar- ‘ ter in New York city, where gems and • 1 negotiable securities of fabulous , amounts were piled high on tables, and a coterie of men (including a lawI yer and a bank examiner) who had ; possessed them, but were afraid to - place them on the open market for sale, was unfolded before a jury in i the Federal District court.

country’s failure to reach a final agreement on debt funding. M. Calllaux Is in the midst of a hard fight to sustain not only the temporary debt arrangement made in Washington, but his entire financial policy. Czechoslovakia’s debt mission, headed by Dr. Vilem Pospisil, successfullyconcluded its business with the AmerI lean foreign debt commission last week and an agreement was signed for the funding of the Czech obligation to tlie United States of $115,000,000. CTpAKING advantage of general dis--1 satisfaction with the high rents imposed on poor householders in Panama City, the Reds there promoted a series of bloody riots which the lo<-al police were unable to stop. Therefore President Chiari called on the United States for help and three battalions of the Thirty-third infantry from Fort Clayton. In the Canal Zone, entered the city and took command of the situation. About the first thing the Yanks did was to raid the Bolshevist headquarters. One of the Rods was killed by leaping from a window. Quiet was restored in a day or so and business was resumed, but the clubs and saloons were kept closed by tbe Americans. Printers and signers of Incendiary proclamations were arrested. The Panama governun-nt recognized that there was reason for complaint of high rents and President Chiari persuaded the landlords to promise a reduction of 10 | per cent for the cheaper dwellings. I The American troops, which were comi manded by Brig. Gen. C. H Martin, it was announced would remain In the city until the landlords and tenants bad reached a definite settlement, PRESIDENT COOLIDGE announced * on Tuesday that he had accepted the resignation of Secretary of War John W. Weeks, and at tbe same time he appointed Dwight F. Davis of Misi souri to the cabinet position. Mr. i Weeks has been incapacitated by ill- . ness since last spring and Mr. Davis, | his assistant, had been acting secretary. He performed tils duties well, and dealt so satisfactorily with the crisis precipitated by Colonel Mitchell's aircraft charges that the President concluded he was the best man to succeed Mr. Weeks. He is a young man, the youngest in the cabinet, but has a fine ' record, as a civil official in St. Louis, as a hard fighting officer In the war I in France and as a member of the war . , finance corporation after the conflict ? ended. He is a leader of the Missouri Republicans nnd in 1922 nearly beat the late Senator Spencer for the nomination. Col. Hanford MacNider of lowa, former national commander of tbe American Legion, was made assistant secretary of war. As a banker he is a capable buisness man and his selection is pleasing to former service men. The passing of Mr. Weeks from public life, foreseen for months, was pathetic. He has been the trusted adviser of two Presidents, a strong man in his party and one of the best loved men in Washington throughout twenty yea-rs. He is only sixty-five years old but his health is broken and it is understood lie will soon leave for the South. UNITED STATES SENATOR SAMUEL M. RALSTON of Indiana, who had been suffering for months from a disease of the kidneys, died Wednesday night at his home, just outside Indianapolis. He was almost sixty-eight years of age. Mr. Ralston was born on an Ohio farm, earned his living while* acquiring an education and became a leading member of the bar and of the Democraticparty in Indiana. In 1913 he was inaugurated governor of the state, and in 1922 he defeated A. J. Beveridge for tbe United States senate. He was a prominent candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination in the national convention last year but, being already in 11l health, he withdrew from the contest. The release of his votes started the break that resulted in the nomination of John W. Davis. Another death that must be recorded Is that of James B. Duke, the tobacco magnate and former president of the American Tobacco company, at his New York residence. It was only a few months ago that Mr. Duke gave $40,000,000 to educational institutions in the South, most of it to Trinity college in Durham, N. C., the name of The narrative was given by Earl Victor von Brandenburg who, with 1 eight other men, is under indictment । here charged with participating in the disposal of more than $300,000 worth । of the $1,300,000 securities stolen by . Gerard Chapman and his pals in the holdup of a mail truck in New York four years ago. I He was a government witness ' against A. W. Perelstrous and Stephen ’ Robinson, Jr., of this city, who are i charged with conspiracy in aiding the pledging of the $300,000 in securities

which was changed to Duke university in memory of the donor's father. — PROTESTANT Episcopalians in their triennial convention in New Or- i leans have been attracting a lot of ; attention. In the first place the con- j vR-tion of Bishop William M. Brown ! on charges of heresy was confirmed by the house of bishops and, despite his resort to the civil courts, he was deposed from the ministry. Then the i house of deputies voted to exclude the I word “obey” from the marriage service and the proposal went to the bishops ! for acceptance or rejection. Next, tbe church abandoned its practice of fill- ' Ing the place of presiding bishop in accordance with seniority of consecra- r tion and resorted for the first time to election. Bishop Brent of western New York and Bishop Gallor of Tennessee were the leading candidates I but neither could command a majority, j Finally as a compromise Rt. Rev. John ; Murray, bishop of Maryland, was ' elected. He Is sixty-eight years old and is classed as a conservative. OF MANY witnesses heard by the aircraft board last week, the most j Interesting was Rear Admiral William ! S. Sims, retired. As has always been | his habit he "talked right out in meet- j Ing.” devoting his remarks especially to the Navy department and Its ad- j | ministration at present and in recent | years. This he described as “unrea- I sonable, unscientific and unmllitary.” ; and he respectfully but unmistakably let the board know that his opinion of ' Secretary Wilbur was nothing for that j official to be proud of. The depart- I ment's conservatism in the matter of new weapons, marksmanship and other advances he deseribed as unutterably stupid. He urged the ms-essity of a i definite aircraft policy, asserting that , the Navy department has not and never has had such a policy. He praised Colonel Mitchell but disap- i proved of bls proposal for a separate air force. Four generals of the army, Summerall, Ely, Drum and Barker, also disagreed with the Mitchell plan, and Ely said officers who were asking It were not playing the game because they were not supporting the other arms of the service in time of peace ; and lacked loyalty and discipline. All agreed that the doughboy is and al- | ways will be the decisive element In warfare. AMERICAN capita] is to regenerate Liberia, the little Negro republic on the west coast of Africa, and at the same time is to undertake to smash the British and Dutch control of the worhl's rubber production. Harvey S. Firestone’s rubber company is the one that plans all this and he announces that it will expend $100.000,0()0 in Liberia. setting out great plantations, building towns, harbors, railways and highways and giving employment to some 300.000 natives. A* concession has been obtained from the Liberian government, contracts have been let and work already has begun. RENEWED attempts of communists to commit the American Federation of Labor to recognition of soviet Russia and to co-operation witli the Russian trade unions were frustrated by the vote of the convention in Atlantic City. The delegates also rejected a resolution attacking training camps, instead declaring their approval of national defense and denouncing communist pacifists. Other actions of the federation were condemnation of ship subsidies in all forms, of the proposal for a uniform industrial court law, of “speeding-up practices” in government departments, and of Public Printer George Carter for alleged discrimination against union employees. President William Green and all other officers of the federation were reelected. ON THURSDAY the new prohibition enforcement machinery devised by Assistant Secretary Andrews of the Treasury department went into full operation, and as a starter in the way of economy two thousand prohibition agents and employees of the service were severed from their jobs. Some of these will be reappointed. Mr. Andrews has announced that the administrators would be held responsible for the conduct of their forces, and that they would be given a free hand in naming their subordinates in order that the latter could, in turn be held responsible to them. with the Corn Exchange bank here for loans of $271,000. “Perelstrous told me how the deal had been put through in the Corn Exchange bank with the securities,” testified Brandenburg. “He told me that he had been taken from place toplace, until finally he found himself in a room —he didn’t know the location —where there were a large number of Russians whom he did not know. He said there were diamonds, rubies, and gems of all kinds, and securities piled high on large tables.”

OOOOOOCXXXXXXXXXDOOCXDOOCXDOO HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” OOCXDCXXXXXXXXXJCKXXXXXXXXXX? 1325, Western Newspaper Union ) A PICNIC FOR GOOD TEETH A N ANCIENT philosopher long ago observed that it is easier to stimulate men by rewards than to scare them by punishment. Naturally, this applies to children even more than to adults. An interesting and amusing illustration of this truth is told in a recent issue of the Listening Post, the monthly bulletin of the Pennsylvania department of health. The school nurse in Hanover had been trying for some time to have all the school children look after their teeth. The children were told the dangers and discomforts of decayed teeth. But little headway was made. Finally, it occurred to Miss MacKenzie that a reward might do more than a threat. So the local ParentTeacher association was interested and a plan worked out. It was announc 1 that there would be a school picnic in the spring before school closed. What is there that rejoices the heart of the child like a picnic? Would they go? They would. The invitation was accepted unanimously. But —as the old lady said to tbe life insurance canvasser —there was a catch in it. Only those children could go who brought along a certificate from the family dentist, saying that their teeth were in perfect condition. Then followed four months of the busiest times the dentists in that town had ever known. Parents were amazed. Children who had cried and rebelled when taken to the dentist now went ' with joy and gladness. Children vho had tried to get out of this dreaded visit now begged their parents to take them to the dentist at once. An honor । roll for each room, on which appeared i the name of every child who had ■ brought back his certificate of dental perfection, hung where every child i could see it. The one desire of every child was to see his name on the roll. The school board offered a half holiday and the Parent-Teacher association offered a prize of $5 to the room which would first show a complete list. It was won by the third grade three months after the campaign began. Tho school enrollment was three hundred and fifteen. When the picnic was held, two hundred and thirty children had perfect teeth, forty-eight had been to the dentist, but had not had all their repair work quite finished i and thirty-seven children, chiefly in ' the primary grade, had not been ex- j I amined, probably because they had no dental defects. — RAILROADS AND DISEASE / T' HE spread of disease is largely due to man’s movements from one place to another. Disease generally follows travel routes. In the Middle Ages, tlie Black Death, as bubonic • plague was called, always spread I along the established routes for car- ’ avans and shipping. Cholera from India has always followed the paths taken by returning pilgrims. The crusaders caused an enormous increase in disease. The East and the West ! swapped diseases, European diseases were carried by the knights, squires and camp followers from England. France and Germany to Palestine. On their return they brought back the diseases of the Orient to their own ; households. Naturally, this spreading ; of disease was slow, as all travel i then was by foot or by sailing vessels. Witli our present-day rapid ■ travel, all diseases would probably be ! world-wide if it had not happened • that, just about the time steam began to develop as a means of transporta- i tion, our knowledge of disease and its j prevention also began to grow. So that today, in spite of the fact that > men travel freely and rapidly all over the earth as never before, disease is controlled and prevented as never bei fore. So important is the control of dis- ' eases on railroads that it has become a special branch of sanitation and ; the United States public health serv- . ice has worked out a special method of controlling tHe spread of disease on railroads, which has been adopted by all the forty-eight states. In Public Health Bulletin No. 129. Dr. Thomas R. Crowder, chief of sanitation of the Pullman Car company and one of the recognized authorities on railroad sanitation, tells how this work is carried on. Modern knowledge has done away with many of the old beliefs and fears about disease. Our grandfathers were afraid of things. They thought any object which a sick person had touched could transmit the disease. So, in times of yellow fever epidemics, they spent much time and money and destroyed much property, for fear the baggage of travelers and the cargoes of ships and ears might carry disease. Today we know that things a.e comparatively harmless. Few disease germs will live any length of time outside the human body. With tli • exception of those diseases carried by insects and those carried by dirty milk and water, diseases are passed directly from the sick person to the well. So the control of disease on trains is practically the same as the control of disease anywhere else The most important thing is to keep the well person from coming in contact with the sick person. Much in Little Not until 1840 were matches successfully manufactured by machinery. Commodore James Biddle was a midshipman at seventeen. Some of the London power stations burn as much as 600 tons of coal each day. The battleship Oregon was first commissioned July 15, 1896. Its hull and engines cost $3,180,000. It takes from 300 to 600 pounds of water passing through plants to produce a single pound of dry matter.

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