South Bend News-Times, Volume 30, Number 326, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 November 1913 — Page 4

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1913

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES.

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES. THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY. 210 West Colfax Avunue. South Bend, Indiana Entered as second class matter at the Postoffice at South Bend, Indiana.

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SOUTH BEND, INDIANA, NOVEMBER 15, 1913 HOW--UNFIT SOUTH BEND--On the ground that the present city administration is unfit to award the- present lighting contract of South Bend, leaders of the citizens' movement, which recently elected Fred W. Keller mayor, held a meeting here and passed resolutions asking that the public utility commission of Indiana look into the matter. The above, taken from an artbde in tho Indianapolis News Thursday, is j typical of a certain .i ort of "tainted j news articles that were s:it out or outh P. end from the otliee of the irouth Rend Tribune throughout the recent campaign, wlics- net 'result was to hold the 4-ity up to ridicule and thanif; before the people of Indiana. Whatever possible shadow of justiHcation there may have been during the t-ampaiga for carrying partisan prejudices into news stories intended for the information of people in other cities, it does not seem that any can exist now. The election is over. Why continue to revile the best ity in Indiana? From the point of view of hone.-t journalism Mich practices are never Justifiable, and are not permitted on many oban newspapers. From the viewpoint of ethics and of city loyalty the practice is absolutely indrfr nsible. Moreover what docs tin Tribune mean toy telling the people of .Indiana that the present administration is "unfit" to let a lighting contract. The renewal of that contract when it expired under terms the most adantacouH to tho city has br-en a matter of careful consideration by the city ior most of the past four years. For two years the administration has been gathering statistics from other cities. Inquiring into the conditions, the amount of light, its ejiicieney, the lours used, and the like, to the end that fcjouth Rend should be ready to t.zt when the proper time came with intelligence and knowledge. The engineering department of the city lias given the closest study to the problem. has gone over scientific reports, and Ftudied conditions, so as to ie the city the benefit of the expert advice of the Pest engineering thought of the country. If the present electric company was not willing" to make substantial reductions, what w as the alternative 7 This w.i5 one question considered. The city tried to stir up competition. To that end bids were asked for one year in advance of the time of awarding the contract and well before the present contract was to terminate, so that if outside capital could be brought in to lower present rates, thai, it would be given time to construct its plant and erect its poles and string its wires. To this vigilance on the part of the city, was due much credit for the considerable reduction in the electric compo ay's offer last week as compared with the present rates. The new administration is almost entirely composed of men untrained In public affairs, unacquainted with city problems, lacking not. perhaps in zeal and honesty and good intentions, but certainly in the technical knowledge that will be nece.-sary to handle this situation rightly. Some honest dinYrenees of opinion may exist as to whether the present or the incoming city administration should handle the ligln mr.ttcr. Put there is no occasion for these attacks on the city sent out to outside newspapers by a South Pend institution. u.w Tin: moosi; and mi: elephant m: yoked To;irrm:it? The captains anil majors of republican politics are fu-ing with redoubled energy oer plans to bring the bull moo.-e and the elephant to gether under one oke. They have agreed that the tiling to do Is to ("it the south's undue representation, unload Whiles, offer a few high places to th- seeding chieftains at;d await the cming of brighter days. .Nothing about pr.ru :p!e-. .Merely a dicker to increase the cha!;e.. of their getting back into o:vo. Which would b. ),,, , -at tains and the majors, if th. could put it acres--. Put how about the folks who " er.t 'moosir.g" be ause the were .-iek of standpat ma na g-:v. :., if Standard Oil Penrose, sick ,.f Morgan Menoptly San'ot . sale of M erg i r. -1 vl:nont-Rjan-Koot? How are th y fo e -oii i. a fellowship in u!,',i !i tli -e t. nonaries will continue to !iac i'. cutr.and.ing intlm-m-.-'.' Most of the f.dk- vi !'' i.'l p!i:rarily Ooice seeker. Th :r main i : in wasn't to "!...; the d. n. i .t s '". It was to forward pi ogre : p.'kc; ". The f.-n-t that tlie;. were wibin.: to bolt the ;. . r. prows i ! ' t they aren't w t.rshipp rs lab- !. They want results. Results from the demo, r.itic ; arty, results from the prores.-iv es party, results from the r puMi an party, results from the socialist party, results from any old or newi party: but results pro.; res 1 e i e.-ul!; something m the " interest of Smith. Jones and Drown, common people, which the aforesaid people can s e.

Alrady their bolting has produced results. It ha.-- installed In the white house the ablest president since Lincoln; one who is cban. fearless and et'ieient. It has revised the tariff downward. It has led to a definite challenging of the money power and forced a lot of its senatorial allies to show their hand. It has made senators elective. It has unseated Murphy ami begun the freeing of New York I state. i Probably none of these things would! ha ve happened had th reactionaries j who gag-ruled the renomination of! Taft been allowed to win at the polls. Why. then, expect the bolters to quit? To quit ju?t when their work is becoming most effective and interesting? If it was us that had the standpat elephant by the tail you can bet the limit that we wouldn't choose this as the time to let go. SFPDl IN; FATHFi; TIM!'. Tis finished. Pift the almost paralysed drivers out of their cars! Pos Amreles to Phoenix, ."i74 miles, in IS hours and Z0 minutes! It was no test along a macadamized track or hard and smooth ocean beach. It was over narrow country roads, a ditch on one side, a wall of rock on the other. It was around sharp curves on the edges of precipices. It was through the packed streets of cities and towns. It was amid the freezing clouds of mountain tops and then down through the hot, clutching sands of deserts. It was taking a chance with death from start to finish. Five hundred and seventy-four miles across country in IS hours and "0 minutes! How the world moves! How man moves! Only a yesterday ago in man's career, James ltumsey ran a steamboat on the Potomac river. It had the unprecedented speed of four miles an hour and people were quite dubious about riding on it. Only a yesterday ago. New York having given Fulton and his partner, Livingston, a monopoly of steamboat trathc on state waters, independent folks traveled on boats on which the machinery that turned -the paddlewheel- was moved by six horses hitched to a crank and walking 'round and 'round in a circle on the deck. .Maybe your grandfather can remember when the Pennsylvania railroad climbed the Allegheny mountains by a series of inclined planes, or when, by speeding up, it was possible to get a letter from New York to Washington in a day. Only a yesterday ago, it took two months for a messenger to reach in with the news that our war with England had been concluded by a treaty of peace at Ghent, and a messenger traveled for two weeks to tind and nidify a citizen that he had been elected president of the United States. Today, Pos Angeles to Phoenix, defying mountain grade and desert sand, miles upon mile?, in IS. 50. by "horseless-carriage". thi: sNirrpps. No doubt you've'noticed that as soon as cool weather comes and you light the furnace fire and stay indoor as much as possible, you at once become subject to tho sniffles. It is one of the great American diseases the sniftles. And not to be sneezed at. either; for. unless remedied promptly, -it is liable to lead to ailments more serious catarrh, for one; sometimes pneumonia: oftener tuberculosis. What is the cause of the sniffles? There may be a variety of causes; but a prominent one is the drying out of the atmosphere by artificial heat. The protective mucous lining of your r.c-trils requires a certain amount of moisture m the air yon reathe. othcrwise it becomes dried and then irritated. The swift change from the over-heated indoors to the cold outdoors increases the irritation: the s'.uffies develops into a "cold" and that may go from bad to worse until you're lucky to escape the undertaker. of coarse, the one big prevention of the snift'.M is plenty of exercise in the open air. That enriches the blood and strengthens nature in its battles against the microbe. Another is plenty of fresh air irsiJe the home, and especially in the bedroom. r.at along with these admirable safeguards you can wisely try a third: I :" ! in each room an open jar containing fre.-h water. Its evaporation prevents the heated air from becoming dry and lu rsh. protects the nasal pas,.'ge - ami puts a wholesome damnenr n the sniftles. '1-Ifl X f W 1 1 1 T' I Tamm.'.ny is a powerful organization i i e aose it draws its strength from both ends of the social organization. In th" j-lam districts of New York's Fast Side, it U the giver of numerous sm.Jl jobs, it attends funeral?, distributes Thanksgiving turke.vs. gets j the boys out of Jail when arrested and patronizes the local saloons. In Fifth av.. Tammany is the silkhatted political solidarity which can deliver contracts and franchises, fix

the police, and put on the bench judges whi will be partial to big business demands and interests. But it is the stratum of society lying

between these extremes that really j possess tn r)0;vf.r In u arp the ! peojde who are not rich or very poor. ! not socially, politically or financially j distinguished, not given to pushing I themselves into the spotlUht. not given to the making of loud noises over their affairs. Put it is they who are the hope of the nation. " It i. ' they who can do anything that.. needs' to be done for the nation. " : It is because of this intermediate i stratum, class, element, or whatever you want to call it. that we have t,ro gres;ive and cthr rebellious movements against political discipline and partisan organization. It is because of thk? stratum, or element that we are moving onward in respect of all matters. These people are the masses. not the massed like thos who consti-i lute the strength of a Tammanv- :.n(1 ! -F"----r - - - x r' iu and rightly only when the;. ubly, ' are justly stirred ot United action. There is no more powerful and resourceful political organization thr.n Tammany. There N no city with j more people sodden in scl.'ishness than J New orU city. Yet.' the people of I that -intermediate stratum do what! At .... - - I inev v. in in New ork. when thy will to do it. And what is true of the metropolis in true of the entire nation. Call it it progressive movement, a radical movement, or an out-and-out rebellion, if you like the spirit is there and alb powerful is fully aroused. Pob itfeians make the mistake of believing it does not exist because it does not express itself within party limits. II lives. It begins to move. And woe to the Philistines ! Woman in Plainfield. N. J., sues railroad company for $20,000 claiming, among other things, that she cannot play whist as well as she could before an accident. This is indeed a sad affair. MARRIED LIFE THE SECOND YEAR mahi:l hkhuekt uuxek. Helen was anxiously watching the clock. It was half-past two and Warren had said the new maid would be there at ten. He had gone to the employment agency the day before and had come home triumphant, said he had secured a "treasure. And now Helen was impatiently awaiting her coming. The breakfast dishes were unwashed and the apartment wan In a state of confusion. he had managed to give Warren a cup of coffee and a. roll; hut with the bahv demanding atentioq she could do nothing more. Eleven o'clock and still no maid. At half past eleven Helen went to the telephone. "1125 Cortland. Hello! Pd like to speak to Mr. Curtis. Yes, this is Mrs. Curtis." A moment's wait. "Oh, Warren, didn't you say she promised to be here at ten? Well, she hasn't arrived yet. Are you sure she got the right address? Did you write it down for her yourself? Shall I? All right, good bye." Then she took down the telephone book and turned hurriedly to the Peliance Kmployment Bureau. "-6 50 Chelsea. Is that the employment bureau? Helen Cirows Impatient. "Well, the maid my husband engaged yesterday hasn't arrived. "Mrs. Curtis," impressively, "Mrs. Warren Curtis. Yery well, I'll hold the phone." A long wait in which Helen impatiently tore tiny strips from the cover of the telephone book, f "You can't? She hasn't been there at all this morning? No, I don't want you to send anyone else I want the one my husband engaged. You think she may be here after lunch. Well, I'll wait until then." Helen straightened and dusted the bedroom, sitting room and nursery, had her lunch of a glass of milk and some crackers from a corner of the table in the untidy kitchen but still no maid. Again she telephoned to Warren, and then to the employment bureau. They would be glad to send her another maid, but they really couldn't tell why the one her husband engaged hadn't reached there. Helen still persisted that she wanted no other she would wait a little longer. At half past throe, when in despair, Helen was about to begin at the kitchen herself, the door bell rang. A tall Irish girl with shaggy black lurs and an immense hat with a huge feather confronted her. Enter Delia O'Donoughue. "Oh, are you the new maid?" "I'm Delia O'Donoughus." w"Put I thought you were to come at ten." "I couldn't get here .any sooner." calmly, offering no explanation as to why she couldn't. Helen led the way into the dining room. "I suppose you have references?" The girl took from her hand bag several letters. Helen glanced over them. They were the same meaningless letters of recommendation that all servants, no matter how incompetent, manage to have. Before Helen realized it. she found that herself, and not the maid, was being questioned. "What afternoons does you give I off" i "Fsually Thursday." j "And every other Sunday?" j "Fnless we have company, you can get off at half-past three every Sun- , da V." j "And there's no washin?" i "Except a few things for the baby j that I don't like to send to the laun- ' dr . "Well, if there's to be any wa-shin 1 can't 'come for $20 1 told your husband that." "But there will be very lew tilings our maid always did them and we have never paid more than $20." "Well. IT see." she said. "Well. I'll see. corale. cendinu;h Helen wondered how Warren could have engaged anyone with so assertive t;'t he needed a maid to a awtiwi . . , . lv to he over-critical. she iled the wav to Anna's tiny room and t tob! her to iret into her working dn 5s. lt- five o i OCK 1'i'iUl K.r LJlluuHiimhi.l washed ail tne mncs ;um pui . .. . t . v. .-..l . . . . tl.lv kitchen in shining order. i'n,-.u..cti(innMv. she was a clean and rapid worker. " Anil from the way she l.' tran her preparations for dinner, she was evidently a rood cook. Just before Warren came. Helen took out one of the litle lace caps that Fh always kept freshly laundered for Anna. "You may have brought some of vour own but I always prefer to fur

A Romance of Extraordinary Distinction The Marshal By Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews Author of The Perfect Tribute, etc.

Copyright, The Bobbe-Merrill Company. (Continued from Friday.) Then he lifted his head and told the boy how the friend whom he had found lately, after so many years of separation, had gone away not to come back in this life, and how Pietro was fatherless. Francois, holding tightly with both fists to the general's hand, listened wide-eyed, struck to the heart. It was the first time death had come near, and the fact of it was grim. Yet instantly he rallied, because he felt that his seigneur needed him. "Put he had a brave life, rr.y seigneur it is the best thlngi that there Is. My mother said so. Mv mother told me that we hall smile later, when we are with thf rood Cod. to think that we ever feared death on this earth. For she says one spends a long time with the good Cod later, and all one's dear friends come, and it is pleasant and it is for a long. long time, while here it i, after all, quite short. Is not that true, my Fcigneur? My mother .raid it." Put all the general answered was to pat his head and say once more, "It is a good thing to have a son, my Francois." Pig little Pietro had to be told what had happened and how the general was now to be a father to him as best he might, and Allxe and Francois would be his sister and brother. He took the blow dumbly and went about his studies next morning, but for many days he could not play, and only Francois could make him speak. He clung to the other boy, and seemed to find his best comfort in the friendship which it had been his father's parting inspiration to assure for him. He was handsome extraordinarily handsome and a lovable good child, hut slow in initiative where Francois was ready, shy where Francois was friends with all the world, steady-going where the peasant boy was brilliant. Between the two, "of such contrasting' types, was an unspoken bond from the first, and at this age it seemed to he the little peasant who had everything to give. Smaller physically, weaker in muscle than the big-boned son of North Italy, he yet took quite naturally an attitude of protection and guidance, and Pietro accepted it without hesitation. There was no jealousy between them. Francois taught the other, who had grown up petted but untrained in the lonely castle of his ancestors, all that he knew of boyish skill and strength, and was enchanted when his pupil went beyond him, as happened where brute force counted. Yet Francois was the acknowledged leader. "Father." Allxe complained. "Pietro will not try to knock Francois down. Pietro is big. yet it is always Francois who comes up behind him and throws him on the grass, and Pietro only smiles and gets up. Make Pietro be brave and quick aa Francois is, father." "Either of m.v boys is brave enough for you. who are only a girl," the general growled, and put an arm around her and kissed her brown head. And Alixe pushed away haughtily. "That is not a way to talk before bovs. They might not understand how a girl is worth six boys, and it Is you who said it. Besides, I can ride, can I not, father? Nobody has jumped Coq over the hedge by the far field but just me Alixe." And the boys nodded their dark heads and agreed, and Pietro added: "She can rtin faster than I. though my legs are so long." And he smiled at her in his sleepy fashion, honest, admiring, shy. Things went on In this way for two .years or more, and the three studied together under the tutor, and rode Coq in the park, and sometimes went together of a Friday afternoon to the Yalley farm and spent a two-days there never to be forgotten. They were royal guests to Le Francois and Pa Claire, and the wholesome simple things done to amuse them were endless; the farm was theirs to play with for that week-end. First, on coming. there was a fine lunch: gigot a leg of lamb which one gave to princes, with salad and bread and wine and much besides. The grandmother told them stories, the father took them driving on hay wagons: the mother nish the white aprons and caps to servo in." "I don't wear no cap," briefly. "Oh. but I always want my maid to wear a cap, especially at dinner. "I 'lon't wear no cap," she repeated stolidlv. "Hut Delia. I WANT you to wear it. I wouldn't think of having dinner served by a maid without a cap." "I'll stay in no place where I have to wear a cap. You husband didn't say anything .-fbout caps." Now, this was not only disconcerting, but painfully embarrassing. Delia went on stolidly mashing the potatoes while Helen stood uncertainly at the door. "Yery well." with as much dignity as she could command. "I'll speak to .Mr. Curtis about this." Warren Hefncs to Help. STie left the kitchen with flaming cheeks. The insolence of that girl! Why as soon as Warren came . . . . Juft here the hall door opened and shut with a bang and Warren entered with a brisk. "Well, did she come?" - "Yes. b it not until after three." ".che's a good worker and clean?" "Yes, but oh. Warren, she's so insolent!" "Insolent? How?" "Why. she won't wear a cap. She fatlv refuses to!" "Oh, blame the cap! What difference does it make so long as she does tho work?" "Hut Warren. I've already said she must! I said I would epeak to you abour it and that you would insist upon it." "Well. I'll not." "But we can't afford to let her disobey me !ike that: Why " "And we can't afford to be without a cirl. now. either. If you get rid of this one, for some fool idea. I'm through. You needn't expect any mor- help from me." And Warren went into his room to brush up or dinner, slamln? the door after him. "How soon do you wan't dinner served, ma'am?" asked Delia, appearing with thK white apron, but with a drtant absence of any cap. "You mav serve it at once," answered Helen stlfHy. "Mr. Curtis has just com." It was a defeat, a flagrant defeat. Helen realised that- She had crossed swords wltli Delia O'Donouchue and Delia 0Donoughue had won. But

showed them how to milk, to shell peas and other occult accomplishments. The children were ready to drop everything and do anything with them at any moment. It was like a glorihed doll's house built for the little visitors. And according to the season they gathered fruits raspberries, apples, whatever grew. The Ferme du Yal was a fairy-land cf pleasure. Also the chateau at Yicques with three children in it was no convent. That good boy Francois was forever in mischief. For instance, there was the winter's day when he got the general into ditficulty with the church toy brutally snowballing the bishop. "I thought it was Marcelle," Francois explained penitently. "He pranced just as Marcelb? prances. And I was hiding behind the door with my ammunition fifteen snowhalls, my seigneur bis hard ones. It was twilight, so I could not see plainly. I fire straight, my seigneur. I gave him one in the neck. 'And one on the head, and two in the back, and one or two in the stomach when he turned. I only missed once. And also when he turned howling, with his hands out. I sent one into his mouth before I saw. It is too bad it was the bishop, mv seigneur; but why didn't he fight back?" And the seigneur, scolding ferociously, had a gleam in his eye which lessened Francois' sense of wrong-doing. There was also an occasion when, hearing the general give a long order to Marcelle for the 'stal.de. Francois went out hurriedly with a stout cord and fastened it where Marcelle must go. And Marcelle, the prancer, caught his foot and entered the stable door like a comet and fell on Jules, the. groom, in his orbit on Jules carrying a bucket of water: and Jules and the water and Marcelle ricochetted in a thousand-legged tangle into Coq's stall; where Coq. being angry, let forth a neigh and a kick together, one of which broke the innocent Jules' arm. So that Francois, stating the case to the general, was condemned to do the groom's work till the arm was cured. The days were not monotonous at the chateau of Yicques. They were not all work and no play to the three very human children living there. So with work and play life rolled rapidly, and suddenly life was all changed. A governess was coming for Alixe. and Francois and Pietro were going away to the great military ischool of Saint-Cyre, near Paris. (To be continued Monday.)

IF. If I had a million dollars And -you had a million, too. I'd buj- you a lovely diamond ring And then I would marry you; And we would be very happy. With all of our wants in reach, If I had a million. You had a million. We had a million each! If I had a million dollars And you had a million, too. We'd ride in a flock of limousines And live on the avenue; Our ways would bo very haughty. Our clothes the latest screech. If you had a million, I had a million. If I had a million dollars We had a million each! And you had a million, too. There's a thousand places ve would go And a million things we'd do; " The summer we'd spend at Newport, The winter at gay Palm Beach, If I had a million. You had a million, We had a million each! If I had a million dollars And you had a million, too. We couldn't love each other more Than now when our coins are few; So I tfuess we are just as happy As if we had wealth in reach. And you had a million, I had a million, We had a million each! P.EUTOX BRALEY. Helen resolved that it wan a victory that would not be repeated. If Delia remained, she must be disciplined quietly but firmly disciplined. Hut since she could depend on no help from Warren, she must depend wholly" on herself. .And she resolved that the disciplining should begin with the morrow. GONE DOWN. The Barbary coast, with re?f and bar, Has sunk beneath the w.ave That sweeps the fair Pacific coast And surges up to save. Grape juice now instead of booze That once flowed all night long, And ;rirls that tangoed in the halls No longer sing their song. Oh, Barbary, of wide-world fame What now will take your place? What will the gilded tourists do When on their winter chase? And where will all those poor girls go Have jou ever thought cf that? Five hundred of them lost their Jobs. And now who'll pass tho hat? From Kalamazoo to Timbuctoo The news will travel fast And .11 the men who travel far Will hear and stand aghast. ROCHESTER. Suit has been Tiled by Atty. Switzer of Wabash, in which Charles N. Ilileman of Wabash county, brings suit against Alden K. Ashelman of Fulton county. fur $:,000 damaxres, as th result of an accident which happered in October when the automobile driven by the defendant. crashed Into th biigKy of the plaintiff, danaged th buesy and injured the occupants. 1 S

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