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The Tipton Daily Tribune from Tipton, Indiana • Page 2

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Tipton, Indiana
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2
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ram TTPTQS HUCY Tipton Daily Tribune Round Town With The Tribune prnusiiED BY RAMSAY O-BANION 'TELEPHONES. 67 AND 68 31KAIDER OF INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Entered as Second Class Matter Oct. 4, 1895, at J'the 1'ostollice in Tipton; Under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Carrier, in City, per Week 16 Cents and Adjacent Counties $4.00 P.ipers JIailed.by Sin.elo Wrap.

One .75 All Subscriptions Payable in Advance Back the Attack! In Loyal Support I of our fightinjc meanrhnx pWgrd ourxKn 10 remind every to buy more Stumps Bonds I-'MSAX When Kipling wrote of the "Fuzzy Wuzzies" ii. desci-ilnii'g thu natives of Britain's .1 in i'acilic colony. Ihe once cannibal isles ihe ijat be miglu havu been. The Fijian's i.iiii.y hair, in iliat fashion for 'protection iii'asi sun. makes the name lit-him as a it; chamber.

(Jnce one of -the most xvarliki- of the races ur tribes of Oceana. tlle Kl- 'changed under 75 years of inissionizing i colonial adminfstratioir to a. peace- of the liritish Kmpire. I'nai iie.siill is a mighty warrior when.the. pc- i tn' c.vmanuV.

Imxvever. is attested-by the story Hum Itoiigainville lh.it a l-'ijian battalion lighting "I Mere wilh the. I'nited States troops ran up a Japanese dead against one Fijian i.i;.i v.nijiuled. Kipling's "Fuzzy i'lSiiuiM that well. No white battalion.

r. -liia! record. Tin- exploits of Maj. Geoff Upton's black battalion points a fad and poses a The iiiai a jiingle-aorn black man. or brown.

ii.oi-e ciYedively in the jungle than a while i.i-.a ciiy in- a cultivated countryside. ia'lsed is v.iiymore Pacilic natives and used as combat troops Japanese', wlm is "no better lighter in xvlnte man. or even as good. TIi N'e'xx Xealuiiil-ulhcercd Fijians lirst proved mi iiaualcaital a. "token" ii-ideV.

fa-ii. did yeoman IT i here, slill was Hiiy vloubt as -to ability. I'pton ballalion i ihe answer on Uougainville. flii- Knowledge has been herd back ballalion nf an available liiiiet, number iias been used silirers questioiied about this' fail-' HM and oilu-r Pacific n.ilivns, r.a'v:- oliered the cxciuie only is: ulii'-iher Ihe black or broxvh ul up'in lii'iidi-j-n weapons. It is an iiiixvaiTanlcd condeceni.it: viexv Meld by coinmniidihg olli- have Iliem ill action.

Fijian" a black- man who appears xvilliug nf UK- so-culled man's alloxv him lo 'hat Noted People Say I'lilA -Si-crc'iary of Kiali-M a point in American i'ioli-y: "The Inn" lias Inim pa.ssed AiiK-rican opinion in foreign laid doxvu 'I in- llui.ig.iriiiii minisler to IM i -e it- Nazi -puppei in M'I MI t.ik.-.s jixe.r liiidapesi: is. mil by" violence. lull to i until, risht and ai'i- -1 Hoilsi; it, a joint li-tter to secretary of riaie ii'-lieve ih.it the great majority ibv -rii-an jp'-'Hile i- badly confused by tin; i ol embryonic internal iomil -tlH domination of small na- "Yesterday in Tipton County Kcpniili'-iin mid neiiKi'-ratic priiiiiiry ing (-(iiiipli-lioli. A ul planted on tin; ciiurt- i.t v. 11." iSiiafli-r, employed -at.

Ihe Jenkins glass A read seriously injured his left eye. Airs. Aiina liacou of.Arcadia was iii serious con- a collapse. v-Kon; VK.MI.S! Jam.e.'H "id. was dead al his home near Alli-'nla nf pneumonia, his death having tli." preriotiu day.

for Mrs. Delia Trtii-loci; ivisro at III'- Hiliikiinrcfiiirch in Nox'ada. f'lomcr 0. Ilurton aiiliounciid his candidacy lor ih'- K'-p'iMi'-an u-'HJiiualitiu for rtiii'rdf-i. A ''Steady Subscriber" Chain letters are not considered an "iiifraction" of pos- tal However, the postal department very tlclinitcly does not encouriige chain letters in the words of libert Allison, "Frowns on' them." CIIASN LETTISH crazes seem to sweep the country every few Itiglu now we're in Hie midst of such a craze.

CHAIN' MvTTICUS wa.ste a lot of vatiiiiblc paper and countless man hours on Ihe' part, of an already overworked postal department. We liavf yet to nud 'anyone who can actually anil -truthfully. claim lo have won any amount of money or any- else from chain letters. TMK PEOPLB WHO do according to; t'hc chain oriRinators, always seem to be in some other part of the 1 Ill'T "STICADY SVHSCKIUKK" wauls In know Ilie aiisxxcr to the following; "Since I've received seven of these missiles, tell me I can 8nd .35 friends to send I liiem on to and where 1 can set 21 handkerchiefs lo send three names' on each list?" 'i MAYIJK else can answer that one. THESE WOMEN! By d'AIessio BEHIND THE SCENES IN HOLLYWOOD 'Hob -Hope's ing Jinx Falkenburg romariticair ter-Ke'nny getting' more stares 11 quips will be stored in a vault, comedian's home.

"To -Have escorting Anne Baxter at and i.the Somerset Rudy i. i set say Walter- Breu- If anybody a complaint: 1U yl broke down and: wept the shortage of railroad leservalions. it's Starlet Vincent and her Kn- s(a Sign William. Stcrlins. -They" lieins forced, lo honeymoon'oh-a day.

coach en route- to California. 1 Universal will give a belated wed-' iling-reception 1'oir who "ery good in Vallee and-Betty Jane Greer ap-. plaudiris" "Joe E. Lewis and Phil wjieii his 20-year-old son, Harris, in the new revue at Slapsy walked unexpectedly onto-'the whale of a Coy'had-been nine -months Irwin -with Mitzi at' in Pacific as a member of a Clover.club; Alice Faye Klin a. merVhant.ship.-: A sifts a baby ivins- date of "his arrival shower at the Beverly message astray.

Elyse who'll wed -jLieut. Tommy Harmon, also falls probably will b'o eld iiir Maria M'oufez' tuingaloxv. i' St. Patrick's Diiyi 'ilnwued arini-. y.

O'Keefc. He oived his draft notice. Looks With Two ivill be his histi 'puttlire for ill-! "Jim is so'considerate of me. When he finds I want to go someplace with him, he. doesn't he takes another girl." "STEADY SUBSCRIBER" continues "In all seriousness I've "just burned each as it came hut I do think the situation could.do; with a little-airing as 1 am no doubt only one' of many who could do with a little advice as.to! how .1 ani lo keep my friends and still': not be bur-! dcned -with such foolishness." Atlanta Carrie Leonard IMicme Atlanta l'2U Visit Husband.

i 1 served by the hostess, assisted by. her mother, Basey. Personals. 'Wednesday dinner guests of 'Mr. and Mrs.

Vern Parker 'Mr. and Sirs. Omer MuCulIou'gh, Tiptouj i Mr. and Sirs. Carl Sinclair eu- and T.IIK POST 0-MCK now iilrs Mary a lls and daugii- l( nain (1 a Sunday supper Mr.

ilailv lelcplione calls Ironi people WiiiituiK to knoxv! if tlie postal department war I Joan, of Atlanta, and and Mrs, Charles Stanley chains. The post lillicc. docs not encourage war ami Mrs. Guy Clemans. of daiish.er.

Janet: Sue. stamp chains or anv other kind of chain. 'Straxvtown. motored lo Indian- Il al11 of Mrs. Mont N'ickc-v went to-Cic'- iapolis Thursday evening.

THK WAR STAMP cha.inlis now- one of liio' mel Fi cllil biggest, perhaps the biggest, and each letter car- Olhcer Donald enroule' iim family. Mrs. Nickey is mak- fi-oin the coast to Milwaukee, in the lieadliues flyer continuation 'to "my story that, tul a WAVE and Jackie Ooogaifs new job' with the inp; Abbott and Cos- air commandos is an exciting one. playfully to give the Kid's ad- of Htm in sent M-G-M a strip! both dress on reuuest "but can't keep; up with the deluge Here's the "We've off the. screen fora.

tllree months." -they. Flight OnH sa "and. -Uliousht you; might 11 duration. all-Uu- First -Air Comiiiaiido Force, APOi New York-; City; a sc.reeiv testl" Kay VYiiliam's is geilin 'publicriy xvith'Capt. Claik Calilo, lie-also is see.ing VirgiiiM two or three limes a week.

The" Jimmy OF PARALYSIS. put Lirey tip again. nursery furniture barely xx as in to retire stalled iii lime for ibe rellini if Phyllis PablosroinaiiVi- has The 'I'l-irrv I-line-' cliangi- of-mind. still intends, from the screen 'afterI resting as well at the Hl beti prescllt ils can Her daughter. Mrs.

Sylvia Morrison Betty fcrabta arid the baby sne.does not; Not lor long.j.^ the hospital. Henry Fonda, children are" assisting in now a lieiifenant J. lUlv ben- lior CII-P HOLLYWOOD 111-.) The Peers; I he's tin- ries 'the infiirniation that the chain cd" by the. postal authorities. ea r- is- ero Wednesday, xvhere she -will visit xvith her; son.

Mud N'ickey. TH.K.V.TIIKKK IS Ilie "Lurk of London" seems lo bit Ilie country. Ami iiime cbain (make a million ilollar.s for little dime) still is -with us. The is tin 1 chains are persuasive but lias anybody ever won -anything? Wis. coast to After a two-hour visit with iiis parents and daughter at union sktlion.

xvho he Had seen for 15 months. the not Wheii lie wife. left, fiii- Milwaukee his Clemans, accompanied him. Quotable Quotations l.Olll) HALIFAX. P.rilish Amhasriiidor in llu ('niled Stales, tribute tn llu French underground: have profound-faith Ihe revival of France.

We believe that tile suffer-, three and a. half years xvill have the elicit of purifying lire, from xvliich slu- xvill i-mersi- xx'iilr vigor and vitality." i xv tie re she visited iintjl i I When he was-transferred' lo an-' nt.lier station, he has been in the i si'in ici- for IS months and has il M.cdilerraneaii the past I months. Hoi st-rvi il in the invasion of other' invasions. Cleui- "has several souvenirs it-inn Italy and other One is iiiade from Ci-ruian ail- pro- llisller. also foreign money: small CAPT.

IIOI.5KKT C. J01.INSON. fclaling tin- g'dd of Christ, and 'many, enemy planes which, made him Die some very lovely om leading American lighter ace in tin: European- 'iMsiti-ii jvilb her ihea.nv of oi-ei-alions last week: lirst one Mrs. Ciiy hailed out. I the second hit tlle ground iii the damiiede'sl explosion, xvhile Hie third exploded in the air.

This is my ideii of a mission." FOSS. top Mu'riiii: Corps tighier ace. ill the South Pacilic after a I'liiled "U'e'K; lin mil I'm-- 1 never had the laiiHest mil ion Uickeiibiicker's scon- in- the I had tied II inilil I lefl- tilt- combat ziiiie." MOV. leader, of tlie Ci r'inaii labor I'KHH. in a j-peecli to Hitler youth picked up by a IJritish briiadcasting station: "i used to drink bit in" llu- past.

iJtil true to the Fuehrers principles I have given it up and itjagree.s xvilli me I do not even miss ii any 'more." CAPT. HAKOI.D. K. Marine ligliler pilot, explaining Innv lie managed Iii survive a- 1 lll-inili'-iin-liour pliingir into the wall rsoli Nexx (ieorgia Island: "A man named liiid was sitting liiu." rested from her slay in tile desert. Joan Fontaine to Tonmlo to cousin.

Maj. Mclliigh- 'Hi-reward He' Ilax'illaud. xvhom lias never met. liarring a 'John Stewart of Prairie. suffered a stroke of paralysis at home this week.

Her right side is paralyzed and her speech is affected." is 73 years of leave. Crooner JVrry Co mo Woody l.l.-r- Kalpli Ui one afiernoon. reported inierua-j publishit-r i iiaVi'-- preparations to lo her home at Cicero. Mrs. Anna Hobbs xyas bro'uglii- hi iicr libmo in Atlanta Tuesday I'l'oin tin- Melhodist hospital af Iiidianapulis.

llohbs had i been a.patient at, the 'hospital' for weeks- under Irealnlent for iriperlension aiid. several blood transfusions xvere admiiiis- xvhicb seell.led to improve her' condition. Sliv is some better. Hallir Teal xvas bustess at a Stanley di'iiimfs-traiion Tuesday Tlle door xvtin by Airs. Ab-ne I.eaeh.

The for tearing out Ihe pi'o- lile of "a man his i behind bis bad; xviis awarded- r.Ms. Fippen. xxliicil merrimeiil. Airs. Teal 'reci-ived several nice gifts in exchange oilier' hospitality.

Dainly ivfrcsli- IlK'llts xvere by the host- O.M.V"-FOriJ I.KFT. iifan 1-A. In one afternoon." iiiiisn nve boys in Sammy Kaye's 'or- dated i-li'estVii receix'ed iheir T-A- rating. say thai world chainpionship 1 profes-' When Capi. also is cxpeciing.

but j.sipnal basketball tournament was it. Says rumor doxvn to ijs senii-finals today xviiii sta'rieii from, a wisecrack she a 1 iii 'Globe made iui the set. 1 Mrs. Kir-! Brooklyn For.t mm Wynn just gol skin; ZoIIners aiid New. York Ke- fi-om In-r ai-tor a i in the niunin.g.

overseas ill the.jsaine. troupe'' lain- walked intu Carob- Landis' the first thing he xvas tin- hall mirror, across liatl been- scraxvled in. lovo. J'ou." you tnoseisiories link- wiih Pairiei.li' Cloddard. Don't miss the Want Ads.

1 St absence. S. ('. S. Met; i'lbe nf Chn." liail Service met Field.

iJiloxi. Aliss.v l.i|ir.v Tin-sday. evening, xvilli ten 21. i. iii'-Miliei-s and -one gllesl niaiely Ki'ssb-r Field soldiers The IniMiii nieei- were under hospital (ibs'TvatiiiM in.

charge the presi- Icday at'er ul' liglliiiing diHiJ. i.ong. xvbi'-h struck, in the area where they iiljeiK (1 i.x illi'sung. M-ripliire read-. elicanipcd, killing one.

solin'i: and prayer, 'given by Airs. Flora Lynch from, the devotion "Tile Song." were from Ibe t-bair- (if. Spii-iliial Life. Airs. Jane.

T.fy!«ir. and eiiairmaii of Chil- urk. Mrs. Jexvell Helms. iii-eiiiliii-i (in Wiiiiien'ill Ibe Nexv (if Industry was gix-en liy May P.ax-y.

After tninsai-led a hour xvas 'enjoyed. Kefresh- (if nnr bi-i-ad and I'ea xvere' Tribune. Want Arts KOt PKKDKTS 1 i.us xvill have mure trouble xvitli Great llritaiu xvith Itdssia or anyii'nc i-lse when it jo the peace Ilie. xvarning left -joday by iGrover Kdilor of the Toledo lilade. 1 HO XX- TAXPAYICIl.

'protesting IVM'iling pigeims during pas! -year-xvas not considered an allowable ti'iii undnr the heading of "ciinlriliiitioiis to religious "That's niy religion. It brings me nearer to God." L1KUT. GKX. JOSKP1I W. STILWKLL.

(le.srrib-' ing.relations, between and American soldiers on the UurmcKe front: "They have virtually formed a mutual admiration society." STRICTLY. BUSINESS SO.MK lan.ScoM. a xvas a Irallic cop mimi-ii Kc-ill and. brought ln-l'oi-e a judge whosi: iiMine'xvas Scolt. When the latter learned I lint Hie name was Scott the judge siiid "I'll lei you go to which the siirprisc.il Scot replied.

"Creat Scott!" i HOKIUMVKU TI.MI-; farm trucks today have exceeded I heir originui in farininfe areas. Some fanu trucks have an" average of Sii.ouu miles. How they have mantiKcd to hold together in the of a shortage of maintenance parts is pi' miracles of highway transportation. of- Slate Cm-dull Hull, slating war and postwar "Soino intenialional iiKfiicy must be xvhich can. if neciissary, keep the peace among na- Ui He's trj'ing to make synllaetic alcohol from old rubber!" By Herbert Hoover and Hugh Gibson i (This is the seventeenth of the newly-revised, un-lo-tlie-nun- ule vcrsiotiof their important book.

The Problems of. Lasting Peace, prepared especially (or this series by Herbert Ilnovcr, thirty-first President of tlic United Stales and ilnrjh Gibson, former minisler to Poland and Ambassador to Uclyium and ISrazit.) i XVII Representation, of Nations on the'World Institution ganization of the League provided for an assembly reprcsent- ing" all nations equally Avhich could hot take action 'proval of the Council, a Council on the great nations had con, slant membership each with a- veto power over all action. "It was 'established at Geneva with" an able and. professional. director and.

a 'secrptariat. But meetings of the' Council were held only periodically, and the Assembly'less often, lisuaily once a year. The League was thus mostly conducted by a professional staff of various Thus there developed a certain, weakness iin that. the League came to be held a sort of distant relative of'the-Foreign Offices of the world. It seem to the writers that the regional councils, which at base should constitute the "world institution," should comprise super-ambassadors constantly in session.

In other words, the nations would 'not await a crisis before convening sporadic meetings from which everyone was in a hurry to return to his normal job. The interregional council superimposed over the regional councils could quite, well be chosen from the Ministers of Foreign'Af- fairs and should always include, the larger nations. They would constitute a sort of final resort in case of major disturbances. One weakness of the League was its failure revise onerous treaties. It became the bastion of the'status quo.

Cer- tainly, experience shows that peace can best be preserved, not by preventing change and putting I future in a straightjacket, but by seeking to control change and direct it. any attempt to maintain the status quo in- definitply is a direct, invitation to peaceful means being, denied, the change can come only through We therefore, that. American policy should be directed to build the "concepts of revision Into the body of international law to a place of equal importance with the other pacific methods, alongside of concilia-. lion, mediation, arbitration, judicial decisions, and cooling-off periods. It it further suggested tliat the application of any nation to the world'institution for revision of treaty, provisions, not sooner tian ten years after their conclusion, should be implemented by the appointment of a committee of outstanding statesmen not-in- terested.in the dispute to report and negotiate'a reasonable settlement.

The question- of 'authority or non-authority of the world institution itself to use force: against an aggressor is the most difficult of all-problems! The. League-experience on this question is valii- -able. The theory of the League that all controversies be-. nations 'should be submitted; to pacific settlement- and that if any nation refused and began military action, it.was to be' dealt with as an aggressor. Thereupon, collcctive-ecbriomic tions (breaking'off trade orTinan- tial relations and or, or military force should be' applied by the other members.

The League was thus founded upon two different One was to prevent war by settlement of controversies through pacific methpds; 'thb other, to assure peace by economic or military force against aggressors. The two concepts clashed. It seems to us that certain realistic considerations, must'domi- nate this whole The first is that economic sanctions contain two illusions. One is that such action" is "short of war." The unemployment suffering imposed the recalcitrant nation by' economic sanctions is about the same as war with.the. absence of shooting." Small nations might submit but the large nations have hitherto -replied to threat of -sanctions by counter threats to go to war.

The other sanctions is that all nations can be brought to support blockade, boycott, or Every. aggressor nation has friends who may deplore its conduct, but they will, not take part in such actions against it. It can be concluded that antine," ''blockade" or "economic to great nations mean- war and that-any other belief is The only effective "sanction" in case of ag-- grcssioh is military action. Copyrisht, and Company. 1912.1943.1944.

Distributed by KinK Features Syndicate. Inc. The League of Nations idea of 'its being obligatory on all mem- ber nations, to use their collective military power is not likely-to work in case of an important nation for the same reason.that eco- i'ripmic sanctions do not work." It was proposed at the time the i League of Nations Covenant was formulation that should have its own international army, navy and air force with to compel peace. ThatsugT- gestion has.risen again in the be- lief, that such action is necessary if there are.to be "iron teeth" in security." Several ob- jections we're raised at the discus- sidns of 1919. One criticism was that a body whose equal vote could be controlled by an aggregate of.

small nations representing only ten.or twelve.percent of the 'people of the world might force the institution into adventures against the udgment of the larger "nations who would have to do the "work and suffer the losses. "A further criticism was" that such an army, navy, or air force would have to be commanded by human beings of some they would have tb. be comprised oC nationals; of different cquntries. The commander in chief of such an army, if its strength were sufficient to discipline a large power the dictator of the' world! a new approach to this" whole problem it-may be that the world institution should be set up solely for settling controversies by pacific means. It may be that for "along time to come we sh'ould depend upon the Transition Period Trustees-of Peace as the police There is great problem in timing the creation of the world institution.

have proposed that such an institution should be created as the last step in the Transition Period. We must first make peace before we can preserve it. There-are many reasons for this course. fighting ceases there will a "period.of great violence in famine, pestilence and revolution. such conditibns it is daring to assume that a world-wide institution can be entrusted with the maintenance of-world order.

However successfully large deliberative: bodies may serve the cause of democracy in times of. peace, they alone are inadequate for dealing 'with emergencies. They, quickly become debating societies incapable of action. But we may say at once that American peace policies should include participation in some sort of world-wide institution to pro- serve peace. (Concluded'tomorrow).

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About The Tipton Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
224,526
Years Available:
1907-1971