South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 9, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 January 1914 — Page 6
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES. SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY. 210 West Colfax Avenue. South Bend, Indiana STATESMEN REAL AND NEAR THE MELTING POT ritered a-s second cla3 matter at t ho Bostr'jVe .tt South Bond. Indiana C03IK! TAKE l'OTLl'CK WITH US.
FRIDAY, JANAURY 2, 1914
BY CAKIUEK. D&llr Bunday In dvanc?, pr Dally and Sunday by the week, 12c Xar IS. 00 Daily, single cory 2c RDday, single c?py So BY MAIL. Xa.lljr and Sunday !n advance, jer year $4.00 taJly. In advance, per yar J3.00
If your name appears In tho te! (-shone ciirctory you can telephone rour want "ad" to The Ne-vs-Timr -a cr'.lce and a bill will be mailed after lis Insertion. Hom phone Bell phone 2100.
CONE. LOBENZKN A WOODMAN Foreign Advertising rteprtrentatlvts. 225 Fifth Avenue, New York. Advertising Building, Chicago
SOt Til 1U;I. INDIA NX, JAXTARV 2, 1911.
BY FRED C. KELLY.
AN IWJl'sT ATTACK. Undf-r ttr-.-x of an xc ;rti' nnl situation the Fort Wayne News sharply criticis'-s th- Indiana p ud . t :.i and more than inlim.tU that it to.i!.. surest irnprovfiiu :', V v M nu
the city of South Bend next Monday lie will fi:d no 1 i ll'sr opportunity to inprov- t.v llvir.-.: conditions of tho -':.y th;::i 1 y rliininiainv; th? rniddlc:r. a fr.m the puMic r:;irkot. and it is in opportunity which investigation
presurne to say th.it t'r.'- N. v..s n,n!il V?!l show rhould i.e Improved at the not do Jill it suj.s it v-i r the irri-' ( ari:;t po.-.siblo moment.
provorm-nt of the .state pmoI- y.-tein.l
hut we do tak exeeptic n- t ciii'c
of a hy.stMii that is ,".;;tcii ; model by cthrr states of t it t- anion. Tho (lissiti.rT.'u'tloii of tho NVvj v.'.. caused hy th' arn- t of thr- j.atx! convicts while euid in the i
Th !-lief is juk general in fi-aaru-ial circles that business h;.s "v : f)iOi th bottom of the grade," p.nd. that in:gr5.s from now on will he on an escadinK sc;ile. This belief is i::;ei on the confidence thut the most dfpressin conditions have been re
mission of some "heinous ofie
Onrt hiid iis-aulted '-v ral wcn.ep, a:;- ,,l,,Vtd. other had attempted to kill p-.hc- oil;- - . ,"""' , . , , ,1 he report that 1 ol. Changs Arthur cer.s and the third had commiued , , ,. . ... , 4, , .. ii ariisle will seeK the republican nomhurKlary filiation in this district may he true or
on u luce or tne returns uu-i-.-1 ,)t. We don.t knovvo But one thins would seem to he Fom.-thins wronsis certain, it is not likely the colonel
wiih :i system that turn.; such eliar- ... ... . n.AVta, -in
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2. Dr. Carl L. Alsherg, the government pure food expert, is a moderate eater. And therein he differs from Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, his predecessor. Wiley used to act on the came basis as a lion tamer. He figured that when he had pulled the teeth of his food, n to speak, by having it pure, he could go right Into the cage and associate himself with food to his hearts content. And he could outeat any two men in town. Alsherj,' is a husky, big person, who miKht do the same thing1, and probably would, too, except for his experience with roast duck. As a boy Alsher never could et enough roast duck. Hardly a month went by that lie didn't have to to bed and meditate on-the troubles of those who like rwast duck not wisely but too we. One day as he tossed on his bed of pain it occurred to him that he mi?ht avoid such troubles in future if he would simpb' eat less of a fcood thing at a time. So the next time they had roast duck he ate more sparingly. The scheme worked so well that he resolved to stick to it, and Carl Alsber has been a moderate eater ever since.
acters out n the public, :i i; di----rin'-T a little deeper the .Vvn .vt-tild have found. If it did not know, that these three men were a part of tip twenty-six per cent of the pri-eners paroled who fail to make Kood. The News did not stop t consider that i-eventy-four per c-nt of the prisoners paroled from the penal institutions of Indiana make umid at their first opportunity. It condemns the system because it does not produce one hundred per cent perfect This is manifestly ill considered and unjust. It is a cruel reflection upon the earnest and capable men who are conducting our prisons and charged with their administrative affairs, men who are devoting their lives, their best thought and the teachings of their experience to the conservation of manhood.' We are persuaded th;M iho News spoke under the smart of a personal sting, that if the thr-e p-vicled men had fa 'ed in other places :h- circumstance would have scarcely att;- i' te ! its attention. Th- News should cul tivate fairness under all c.reumFtane. S HiS 1 1TC T M JCniCT. This significant verdict was returned by the coroner's jury which investigated the Christmas calamity at Calumet: That the stampede va. caused by some person or persons raising an alarm of fire within the hall and that only tlmsv carrying union cards or vouched for 'y some member of the union were permuted to enter the place. The attempt to throw tho responsibility for the death of seventy-two persons upon the citizens' committee of the town or upon enemies of the miners' union i thus unite conclusively refuted and the charge, that deputy sheriffs, mine guards and company doctors held back would -be rescuers was. in the opinion of the jury, disproved. The verdict is in accord with public sentiment. It was inconceivable that any person considered worthy to wear the button of the citizens' committee should have wantonly committed an act that was certain to result in death and injury to human beings, many of whom were children, in no way responsible for the unfortunate social condition that exists in Calumet. The real sentiment of the people of Calumet are reflected by its press. In its editorial columns the Calumet News says; "The sympathetic hearts of the people of the ('immunity go out to the grief stricken homes and the citizens st;nd ready to off r vhatever comfort and material assistance lies in their power. The relict committee is anxious to provide such physical necessities as may be needed. Thi? Is not a time for rancor or bitterness, but a time to ulleviate as much as possible a situation that has brought sorrow to all." It is wicked to attempt to lay at the doer of innocent people the awful consequences of the thoughtless act of some person who did not have the brains to foresee the result.
th
irty difficulty In finding
nomination.
The new year is well under way. Its course is plainly marked. There may be some rough weather ahead, but the good old ship is quite clear of the reefs and bowling bravely along under the steady guidance of the man on the bridge.
The building improvements in South Bend last year may safely be computed at a million, a very satisfactory showing. South Bend continues to steadily improve and grow. It has no boom, but its boot works every day in the year.
Among the good resolutions recorded an the first day of the new year is that of the inmates of Auburn prison, who have pledged themselves to good conduct during the year and formed a league for the help of indiiduals.
The president refuses to say where he will meet Ambassador Lind on his return from Mexico, and, come to think of it, it is nobody's business. The result of Mr. Lind's mission is another .story.
The United States flashed NewYear's greetings to the world at midnight and received responses from all quarters of the globe. Circling the earth in forty seconds seems slow nowadays.
The hope that calamity would bring peace at Calumet has faded. Bitterness has been increased by the charge that the slaughter of innocents was purposely caused.
The way the bunks are climbing into the new currency bandwagon reminds one of the old fashioned waterwagon on New Year's day.
Apparently it Is less the supply of farm products than the demands of the middleman that keep the cost of living high.
If elevation to the peerage is any particular satisfaction to James Bryce we congratulate him on it, but it can't make him a bigger man than he was before.
If you know your city tell what you know. If you don't know it, learn it.
Don't forget to change the date line to 1014.
A .ooi m:cMMi:M.vnox. The recommendation of t'ity dealer J. W. 1'ett rs that the public market be made a place exclusively for th benefit of producers and consumers Is in accordance with the original plan and purpose of the ia-ait utb.n. The
X V LITTLE OLD NEW YORK BY NOKMAN. mL v' W X " V V T 't t 'i Y 'i wy NFAV YOUK. Jen. 2. New York's new system of police "lamp alarms" had a tine testing out a few nights ago. And the servants in a palatial home on Park av. had a tine scare, followed by a swell job of cleaning up. And there wasn't any cause for the alarm and the scare and the subsequent labor except an imaginative woman "seeing things". ll was about :;'.e of a misty, moisty evening when the telephone rang in the home of Mrs. Richard Cambrill, :'. Park av. The housekeeper answered. Mrs. Cambrill was dining out. "Are you having your roof repaired?" asked a woman's voice. The housekeeper replied in the negative. "Then there arc burglars on your
roof!" said the voice, whose owner
However, he is not a diet crank and pays no attention to the various theories that one should cat nothing but meat, that one should eat no meat at all, that no water should be taken before meals or after meals or between meals, or any of the other scores of doctors' notions about eating, which, if one followed them all, would bar a person from eating anything whatever. Alsberg simply eats the things be wants to eat, with the soft pedal on the less digestible desserts, and not up to his capacity at any one time. He would be an easy man to cook for. but women folk are inordinately and foolishly afraid of men who know a lot about scientific foods and their preparation, and fo Alsberg is a bachelor. Harvey Wiley was a bachelor, it will be remembered, throughout nearly the entire time that he was connected with the government bureau of chemistry, but he finally convinced the woman he married that he would be just as agreeable a person to cook for as anybody else. The same would be true of Alsberg. Waiters at the club where he lives in Washington say that he rarely if ever complain;? about the way things are prepared. Moreover he would be an exceptionally handy man to help with the marketing. Besides all that, Aleberg has a wonderful smile, a good disposition, and is companionable, though a scholar. He knows a great deal high-grade music, hates ragtime, is an art connoisseur, and collects rare etchings.
Oscar Underwood, who wrote the book and lyrics for the tariff measure that is carrying his name down to posterity, is a grandparent by virtue of tho fact that his own son Is a father. When the grandchild is about the house, Oscar is greatly addicted to the habit of taking the baby on his knee and engaging him or her in light conversation. It had been a long time since he did ctfnything of that sort and naturally he is not as skilled in the actual handling of the young as he once was. His hands are all feet when he gets hold of a baby. One evening Oscar had the child on his lap and was doing his best to talk the goln' bye by e" language in the good old way. The child's mother cam5 along and noted that her offsprings head was several degrees lower than the rest of its body, which is really no way for a baby t be held, as anybody ought to know. So the mother, a bit provoked, snatched up the child from the lay of its grandparent, and inquired: "Do vou think that baby's a tariff report?" Oscar Underwood can always think of a reply when anybody criticises him in the house of congress, but on this occasion he could not summons a single apt retort.
to he
Mark Thistlethwaite, secretary the vice-president, used to be a porter on fi Philadelphia paper, was entirely inexpert n ed when
landed his job, but ' to conceal the fact as much as possible. His first assignment was to write the account of the meeting of a suburban school board. He took a great many notes and got down pretty much everything that happened. Written out in full the stuff amounted to about a column an da half. The next morning he arose bright and early to see his work In print. He found it after a long, tediotis search. His column and a half had V?en boiled down to this: "The senool board met last night, but transacted only routine business."
public i arket was hitemo-d to t !n:i- explained that she lived across the Inate rather than aid the middleman. I street and had for sumo time been . . ... , j. , j watching two men on the roof of the Admitting pcddlei, to the .U-t!ramli:iu honu and permitting them to purcha-e sap-j A hurried consultation was held by plies on the market d f--ats ;h- obvi-ithe housekeeper, the butler, a couple Otis purpose to bring pr..dr.c.-r and ,f f''tmen or two. None of the male , , . j members of the corps was inclined to consumer together to i.ie .ml taat the j viMt l5u. up,ur Ftories ami soo what producer may obtain the f -11 benefit was doing, so the butler passed the of his industrv and thit the cer.sum- buck by calling the police. , lt.; , f rb- that verv neighborhood nic new er mav secure the nee.-ar:e of lit . . . - ; -green lamps, on corner posts have just without adding unm v .-ss try profits ; ,,n Pricd as police signals. The to their cot. i d-k lieutenant , who got the alarm reIf the best results are to h tain-! ' 'v"' with joy and switched on the . ., I r en glow. In a few seconds every ed f;om the market priM.ege it must ; ,.inip ,n tht, ,,rtcilu.t wus Hashing. In b restricted in accordance with th-'ja few seconds more a policeman had original intent of the projectors ef telephoned headquarters, gotten the the enterprise and the eiiv s, ah-r's I address of the threatened premises 'and v.as dashing thitherwards. in his recommendation. The rights of the j V:1 (.:im a Imok 0f reserves and consumer and producer are tr sp.t-sed ' r pot ters from the station.
nr,n bv o:,enin - the market to sbec-! A pal- but dignified butler admitted
w -
Tlep. Brumbaugh of Ohio made a bet with a trio of colleagues sometime ago about the probable length of the extra session. The one whose guess was the farthest off was to buy 25cent cigars for the others in the wager. Brumbaugh was one of the winners and the other day the loser handed him a gaudily wrapped 25cent cigar. Brumbaugh looked at it with astonishment and consternation and refused to accept it. He said that to do so would, be unfair. For he had misunderstood the terms of the wager. He supposed he was betting merely ."-cent cicars. Moreover, he said, if he consumed a 25-cent smoke he would be afraid that some one who knew him misht find it out. "And what if they did?" he was asked. "Why." he replied solemnly, "it would be undemocratic." (Copyright. by Fred C Kelly. All rights reserved.)
TimoUGII TDK YKAIl WITH LOXGFKLLOW. And all that filla the hearts of friends When first they feel, uith secret pain. Their lives henceforth have separate cntlf, And never can bo one again. The nro of Driftwood.
OUR idea of the negligible in beginnings is to start the new year with a holiday. It would be better, as the poet says, that we end it thus. BEGINNING the new year with a holiday we put ourselves behind one day and never catch up. That is why we have to worry a,nd work so hard on the last day. CFLUBUATK the advent of the newyear if you will but don't let it interfere with putting in a good day's work the first day. WHICH illustrates the power of suggestion. The head bookkeeper and the janitor kept us company during the forenoon, but left us the sole exponent of the new idea after lunch. YOU observe we say after lunch. We have dinner at noon at our house, but we would not have you infer that our fellow workers of the morning cling to that antique custom. THE circulation manager will pardon us. He was in for awhile and we heard him say, "Here it is D o'clock and I haven't smoked yet." What Won hi You Do? (Kendallville News-Sun.) Sir: My wife bought a chicken the other day and found inside the fowl an egg. We arc consclenthms people and are at a loss to know whether wo should pay for the egg. J. B. J. STRANGELY enough speaking of conscience this reminds us that the Dogansport Pharos-Iteporter runs a good column. We know It is good because we write a considerable portion of it ourselves. WE are glad to see that a group of English authors is (or are) forming a league for the protection of the purity of the English language. The English are, of course, the natural protectors of the English language and, by the same token, the Americans are
its natural butcherers, if the word Is admissible. WHAT KATIE GOT D ROA3IING. (New Orleans Item.) To New Orleans. Thou art a city beautiful. In a land of sun and flowers; A treasure to be cherished most
In all this land of ours. Before I knew thee, city, I saw thee in my dreams. Yet thought I ne'er should know thy like. Till fancy were supreme. I read of such in story-books,
Saw paintings on the wall; Still felt them only visions That had no being at all. At last it was my fortune To travel and to roam. And I saw thee, wondrous city. Where at once I made my home. Not only for thy beauty Art thouTrnown the world around, But ships sail to and from thee That visit every zone. The streets are grand and spacious. Thy buildings reach the sky, Thy business is triumphant, Thy watchword, "Do or die." The people who have made thee great
Are the best this earth has known, No nobler, grander, truer men Have history's patres shown. KATIE C A VAN AUG H. DID she rush to the show window to inspect the display within? Not that you could notice, but she did straighten her hat and fix her hair. They Usually Blow It Off. (Lafayette Courier.) Christmas is now hull down over the horizon, and the foam stirred up in its wake has nearly subsided. ABOUT those things we were going to do right after the holidays! WHY. we pause to inquire, should L. D. B. forward us the name of Halpli Tart of Williston, N. D.? We have no desire to say anything that would make Mr. Tart crusty. ANXIETY concerning the ice crop should not be indulged in. We always have plenty of ice 1.1 the summer. AND the price is sufficient. C. N. F.
SECOND YEAR OF
MARRIED LIFE.
TIIFIIt FIRST DINNF.R THE NIGHT OF HKJjK.VS RETURN IS A VERY HAPPY ONE.
BY MABEL HERBERT LRNER.
mix
of a
We'll like a You'll it's a dlffer-
"Happy, Kitten?" "Oh, so happy." "Bather a decent place this?" "Oh, Warren it isn't the place!" "But you will admit that a good dinner and a glass of wine have contributed to your comfort, won't you?" Helen smiled and shook her head.5 "Now, as a matter of fact, would you be quite as happy." he persisted, "if you hadn't had your dinner?" "No, I suppose not, but I never like to think that one's happiness is dependent upon one's stomach and particularly tonight." "All right, then, we won't tl ink of it. But incidentally, we'll order an endive salad, some Boquefort cheese and a cordial." "Oh. Warren and it's been such an expensive dinner already. Please don't order anything more!" "Nonsense, 1 guess we can afford a little dinner on an occasion like this. Here, waiter! Let us have a portion of endive salad, and some Boquefort cheese. You needn't dress the salad,
bring the oil and vinegar and I 11
it here. Now. kitten, what kind
cordial do you want?" "Oh, dear, you know how little know about cordials."
A Pons-' Cafe. "I've got it, just the thing! have a pousse cafe! Sounds real kitten's drink, doesn't It? have to purr over that. And pretty thing to look at, too all
ent colors! Helen leaned suddenly toward him with shining eves. "Oh, Warren, I am so happy, so w jnderfully happy! Do you suppose it wiil last?" "Of cours eit will last. Don't be silly! Here comes the salad." The waiter placed before them some fresh, crisp endive and a plate of Boquefort cheese. "Now, waiter, bring a small bowl to mix the dressing in and some paprike and a little pulverized sugar." Helen watched him mix the dressing, with all the old adoration shining from her eyes. She glanced around at the other men in the fashionable dining place. How insignificant . and uninteresting they looked compared to Warren! There was no one like him. The set of his shoulders, the poise of his head, gave him always the air of a man of large affairs, of strength and power. "There, now," as he made a paste of part of the Boquefort cheese and mixed it in the dressing. I think that'll be Just about right. There's nothing like a little Boquefort cheese with a salad like this. Now try that." handing her a plate of the endive, well covered with dressing. "Oh. Warren it's delicious." Warren ate his salad with evident relish. He always ate rapidly and with an unmistakable enjoyment of
j the food. ! To Helen who minced delicately
over everything, this rapid bolting of food in anvone else would have been distasteful. But with Warren, it seemed only a part of his strenuous masculinity. It would have seemed absurd for him to have minced over things as she did. The Best Time. And now as he pushed back his
empty salad plate, he drew
WALNUT GROVE. Mr. and Mrs. I. V. Lydick were euests of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Lydick Christmas. V". and Mrs. J din Bussell of South Bond and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Brown of onth Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stroup rnd family and Mr. and Mrs. Balph H. Lvdlck wrre guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mikesell ChHstmMs. A few from her' rtteob?d the Christmas 1 exercises at Lydick Wednesday evening. Mr." and Mrs. Balnh H. Lydick were cnests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mikesoii last .Sunday.
part of the meal. The careless grace with which he lit and held his cigar always thrilled her, and somehow she always seemed more at eae with him when he smoked. He was more kindly, more genial then than at any other time. "Well, when Kitten gets through playing with her salad, she's to have that pousse cafe." "Oh, I'm not playing with my salad," indignantly. "I'm eating it ravenously!" "Hu-um," looking critically at her plate. "It seems to me you've got about as much there now as you had when you began. Only you've arranged it differently; it looks a little mussier, but not any less. Here, waiter bring some coffee and two pousse cafes!" A few moments later the waiter placed before them two tiny glasses with the layers of different colored cordials plainly marked. "Oh, how lovely! What beautiful colors yellow and rose and green and violet! How do they keep it in layers like that? Why doesn't it mix?" "The different weights of the cordials have different flavors. But you mustn't like it too much. You can't have it often, you know. It's not good for your tummy, and it's apt to give you a headache. All these mixed things do. But you see we're celebrating tonight." Helen still sipped the cordial while he lit another cigar. Warren, it's wonderful to be together again isn't it?" "Of course it is," carelessly. "And did you miss me?" "Of course I missed you? Her Resolution. Her lips were just forming a wistful "Did you miss me very much?" But she checked the Words. This was just what she had
promised herself she would not do! She tried to remember all the resolutions she had made to be just a little cold and reserved and illusinve. to be always a little less demonstrative than he. And now already she was forgetting. But she wouldn't forget any more! By not showing how much she loved him she would try to make him love her more. "Kitten all through?" a Helen sipped the last of her cordial. She nodded. "And we ought to go now. We don't want to keep Mrs. O'Gradv up too late." Mrs. O'Grady was the janitor's wife who was taking care of Winifred this evening. "All right," as he motioned to the waiter for the check. As they passed out through the glare of the lights and music to the street beyond, Helen again forgetting all her resolutions slipped her hand into his with a whispered: "Oh, it has been such a heautiful evening! It is so wonderful to be together again isn't it dear?"
selected a
out
cigar
a ci-with
rrar ease and
critical care. He always smoked
while she lingt red over her salad. And to Helen this was always the happiest
ulators in the n-cearie of life, and the object of the market will never be fully attained until these speculators are banished from Colfax bridge. When Mr. Keller becomes mayor of
the army of rescue. Iarge, muddy boots tramped over Mrs. Cambrill's thousand dollar rugs and up her marl-b- stairs. Nothing was found on the top t'.oor. The skylUht had not been tampered with. It was opened and nothing was found on the roof.
The large, muddy boots tramped through the house and found nothing. At 9:2 0 p. m. the housekeeper, a butler and some footmen and maids were still busy endeavoring to erase the traces left by the army of rescue. They were weary and somewhat peevish. But the new Jamr alarm had been tested and it had worked line.
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TRY NEWS-TIMES WANT ADS
A FIRST RATE BOOK.
I've been reading of slaughter and battle. Of glory and gumption and gore, Of raids upon foemen and cattle and hair-raising stunts by the score. Of heroes of mightiest bravery. Of Villains with records unavorv.
Of righteousness, evil and knavery. And plenty of olden time lore. I've been reading some lovely romances And tales of adventure as well. Of men who took uttermost chances t And braved any fate, that befell. I've reveled, with eyes that were listcry. In fairy tales, magic and mystery, Theology, logic and history. And poems that none can excel. And I've read all of this in one volume. On-? volume I'd never looked through Till I plunged in its close-printed columnAnd its treasures lay bare to my view. Po I learned, after decads unheedinsr. What wise men have long been conceding, That the bible is chuck full of reading, And mighty good stuff it is. too! B Bit TON BARLEY.
at Wilhelm'
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If l 4
iFn f& n
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ectric Company
220-222 WEST COLFAX AVE
El
