South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 97, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 31 March 1914 — Page 6

TL'KSPAY, MARCH 31, 1914.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIIYlfc

SOUTH BEND XEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY. 110 West Colfax Avenue. South Bend. Indbm

Entered eecond clajrs matter t the

BY CARRIER. pally and Sunday in advance, per Daily and Sunday by the weX. .. 12o year 15.00 Dally, Elnsle copy 2o , Sunday, single copy 3o BY MAIL D&lh n A Rundav In advance, cer rear ......... 14.00

thUly, In advance, per year,

If your name appears In the telephone directory you cS.n telephone Eur want "ad" to The Newa-Tlmea ofnce and a bill will be mailed after lti lertlon. Heme pone 1151; Bell phon6 2100. i CONE. LORENZCN & WOODMAN Foreign Advertising Representative. 325 Fifth Avenue, New York. Advertising; Building;, Chicago

.MMTII BF.NR, INDIANA, MARCH SI, 1011.

iii;n roiJjY Kt'u:s. The follies of the few make the miseries of the many. Human beings bound together by th ties of ;i com mon destiny. suffer'more from r f.et ,y ! c fl than from original causes. Th are the Innoc ent victims of a s.t rihee. which perhaps unthoughted is none the less disastrous to the welfare of society and the happiness of mankind. The wayward boy, the girl who goes wrong open cankers in the hearts of those who love them and build bright hopes on their futures. Even a disobedient child is a source of anxiety. But when a man. the father of a fam ily, or a woman, t lie oren. strays from the mother of ehilpath of rectitude it is difficult to comprehend the havoc wrought. A little while ago ;i man was sent to the penitentiary. He had committed a grievous wrong. What he did was more to be eondemned than the act of tho high vva man who meets his victim in a secluded spot and at the point of a revolver robs him of his valuables, or the act of the thief who by stealth approprites to Jus own use that which does not belong to him. He betrayed the confidence of thos who through vears of business dealings had implicitly trusted him. The man ws suppose r! to lie financially prosperous. He was prosperous in his domestic relations. He had a good home and a happy family, a deoted wife and children of whom ho had a right to be proud. His wife wits happy in the confidence and esteem in which her husband was held. The children honored their father. But for the weakness which led this man to walk rough shod over hb, conscientious scruples and forfeit the good will of his feliovv citizens his home might still be a happy one. The story would be less pathetic if this man alone could suffer the consequences of his dishonesty, but that, is impoiisible. No man can do either good or evil and enjoy or suffer alone. Inevitably others are involved. This man's wife has lost rr reason. While he sits in his cell suffering the tortures of remorse the -woman he promised to honor and protect is that most pitiable object of human sympathy, a mental derelict, and upon the children has fallen the double sorrow and burden of a felon father and a demented mother. Such examples of the folly of error should make man take the sobr second thought when tempted to go contrary to divine and human laws. They should be hung up on the walls of conscientiousness to add their warning to the appeals of right impulses. They should save all from the consequences of their out indiscretions, but, alas, they often fail. IS THIS Till: BOARD'S POLICY? The sentencing of a number of bad girls recently, t hurry and leave town. before the goblins should get them; ; girls who had been arrested and kept in jail over night, while the matron of the resort from which they were taken packed lor luggage. Including her furniture, and took to the woods, apparently undetected, naturally raised the question as to whether this is to be the board of safety's future policy. We had supposed when early in the j present administration the board required the chief of police to bring in a list of all i resorts, and a list of the property owners, lessee, operators and inmates, that a new broom was to bo used, and that with this knowledge at hand, the "tratbekrrs" as well as the "trattiic-ked" were to be dealth with but somehow-, in the Railroad si. case, the first raid to be registered, only the inmates appear to have been available. The girls pleaded guilty. They were! told to give Situin Bend "a wide i . """ matron had given K m the quiet se-j .. . . ..... i crecy or a moving van . w.niie tney were waiting to be heard. S'he must have been watched very watchfully. It is an evident good thing that the police raided the place early in the night, or she might have packed the girls in w it h the remainder of her furniture and taken them With her. lc.winc a record of nobody pulled. We womW if it was the plan of the board tf saftty. or Just one of thos police slips tbat the reporters are never missing. We wor ler if it is the plan of the board to frighten the matrons away by arresting her girls reprimanding the effect to abate the cause. We say the hoard because, in this administration, it must not be forgotten that the boird of safety means to Ve the whole thing or know the reason why. They do not Ull the police to "enforce th' law." but pick out the laws to be enforced and I'll them how to enforce it. The chief of the 'outh Bend police' department was probably never lo-s K-t a figurehead than h is right now. He takes orders magnificently. Wry

little that h- does but thitMn consequence hi coming more cheer -

can be traced back to the board of safety with comparative else. And so we wonder if the same rul fcpp'ita to Ihn cay scap of the It til-

Postornce at South Bend. Indiana

i . $3.00 road st. resort keeper. A moving-van, loaded in the night, or in the day, and hustled away to some other part of the city, or a freight depot, is such lnfinitesimally small and quiet thing. that to miss it Is, of course, always excusable and then, perhaps too, the matron was not there in person and maybe the board will say she did just what they wantfd her to escape, and leave the city for the city's good. But they got the girls; the money less girls arrested and ja.ilod for the night, while their hostess made her get-away and the public was given something of a showing. It was real spectacular, the way those "passports,' done up in "prize packages" wen were handed out in court. Was it a "hap penstance" or a matter of board pol icy? And what becomes of the girls? By what law of either God or man are we empowered to sentence our fallen women to prey upon some other com munity; indulge in banishment and make "elsewhere" our dumping group i ? Till) PRESIDENT AND PUBLICITY. William Howard Taft, the only llv ing former president now in captivity, freely admits that he neglected the publicity end of his administration and that both his predecessor and succes sor have been w iser In this respect. Quite properly, we are inclined to think, he attributes his derelictions to Ids judicial temperament. He realizes that he lost sight of the fact that "a thing needs to be iterated and reiterated before it gets home". If Mr. Taft had been an educator accustomed to dealing intimately with untrained minds, or a New York politician, familiar w ith the mental density of the public at large regarding political and governmental affairs, he would not have made the mistake of taking it for. granted that the people either need not know or should understand what was going on. It was not his business as an occupant of the bench to coach the lawyers who practiced before him. They Mere supposed to knew thejr business. If they did not that was their affair and their bss, and it was beneath the dignity of a judge to go about exploiting his rulings. Doubtless, as Mr. Taft now realizes, his inadaptability to publicity was a handicap to his popularity as a president and his success as a politician. It is undeniable that the people are "from Missouri". They have to he shown. Roosevelt understood it thoroughly. He was an admirable publicity man. But he had nothing on Wilson. In fact he never got quite as intimate a grasp on the public mind at Ties. Wilson possesses and he was not capable of so deeply enlisting public sympathy in what he did. It is not good for man to live alone, either as president or as private citizen When he shuts himself up within himself lie is almost as dead to the world as though the occupant of a prison cell. some corirr reforms. A police judge in this state recently discharged a prisoner when. the arresting policeman mumbled ten or twenty words and concluded with the state ment. "so 1 arrested him." The judge declared that he would no longer consider testimony of a policeman who did not have sutneient grounds on which to make an arrest and to warrant him speaking out clearly and convincingly in open court. The same judge also discharged prisoners whom detectives attempted to convict on the sleuths unsupported evidence. There was a time when police court judges were content to listen to tho intelligible, sing-song testimony of accusers, and indeed there are. many w ho d so now, and cut short the, proreeding by barking "thirty days" or ninety days" as the case might be. From the action of this Indiana judge, however, it would appear that there is a streak of human sympathy In some police judges a streak that might well be developed and broadened in all the police courts Jn this country. Tolice courts have long been considered by many as petty tribunals far inferior to the more majestic superior i cr supreme courts. As a matter of fact, it is the police court In which the people without influence and money are most vitally concerned. And in those courts the passing of Judgment on youthful first offenders, or possibly innocent people, should be entrusted to men with as keen insight into human nature and as strong a I spirit of justice as the men in whom are vested the power the higher courts' are supposed to poscs.

, nmrket haket. He doesn't. He goes AN OITIMISTIC FEELING. ; to market frequently, and buys radThe atmospheric w aves of spring are j ishes and cheese or w hatever strikes laden with optimistic and otherwise hLs fancy, and samples some of his i tiii rr h jsj no Vio r i w ; 1 1 in ir rllt n

encouraging messages. The under tone of pessimism is growing faint amid the sounds of increasing activity. Fact is getting a strangle hold on theory. The public state of mind is ful. A considerable revival is noted in the lumber trade. In the Chicago dlstiiet which i the cenlr of the trade

for this district, a much better feeling

exists, due to increased demand. though prices are quoted as unusually low. That is a defect from the dealers' viewpoint, however, which will regulate itself. Southern yards have a surplus which they are willing to discount a little to unload. Chicago authorities report orders for drygoods heavier than a year ago. The late Easter is assigned as the immediate cause, but the optimistic spirit is apparent in the greater number of buyers visiting the market and in improved collections. And here is an other significant thing. Orders placed for Imported toys are said to bo heavier than perhaps ever before. The trade doesn't buy toys largely when the outlook is gloomy. There is a tendency to believe that In a general way the depression Is about over. To a considerable extent relief is delayed by the railroad situation and the uncertainty as to the action of the interstate commerce commission. Two or three officials of the Rock Island railroad "havo found it convenient to go to Europe pending an investigation of the railroad's affairs. If there is anything that annoys railroad officials it is an investigation. England is to witness the spectacle of a fleet of aerial warships flying over the parliament houses. Th- purpose will be to demonstrate Great Britain's supremacy in the air as well as on the sea. The last of the old time feud chieftains in Kentucky, Randall McCoy, is dead. Kentucky's feudal period is now supposed to be ended. It was marked by some of th bloodiest tragedies enacted in this country. Gen. Daniel E. Sickles, lying at the point of death, was one of the most picturesque figures of the civil war. His life since that period has been full of trouble and unhappiness, mostly self-caused. Grafdngfrom a pig's eye to a child's eye has given the latter sight. The feat was performed in a Baltimore hospital. How much farther the substitution might have been carried is not stated. Official reports from Egypt indicate that that o :ntry offers a rich trade field for tho United States. Our producers have been so busy supplying the home market they hadn't noticed it. Gens. French and Ewarr refuse to withdraw their resignations from the British army. The test now is to see to what extent Great Britain is gov- ; ?rned by the military. It is found, to the surprise of his friends, that the late Sen. Cullom's estate exceeds $100,000. The venerable statesman was thriftier than supposed. Villa having clamped the lid on news from Torreon the newspaper are featuring their headlines with interrogation points. The Chicago-police-report six girls missing within a few days. The underground seems to be in good working order. The climax, not the anti-climax, comes In the tolls fight today. STATESMEN REAL AND NEAR 11Y FRED a KELLY. WASHINGTON. March 31. When Josephus Daniels, secretary of the navy, was attending school down at Wilson. N. C, it was customary every Friday afternoon for one section of the schoo! to give declamations from the platform. One Friday a dozen of the boys, comprising all that were to speak that day got their heads together and conceived the merry prank of all giving the sime speech, one after another. The speech they were to give was the one that starts: "On Linden when the sun was low, all bloodless lay the untrodden snow," etc. By the time eight or nine of the jocular youngsters had given those imperishable lines, the schoolmaster was aroused to a considerable state of ire and dignity. He sat through one or two more and then when the twelfth boy was j about to ?peak, he promulgated these I tidings: I u "nniner one ot you aares gn e mai same piece ne win remain aner school and I shall give him some thing that will set him thinking. Josephus Daniels was the next boy. He and his companions had entered into a solemn compact all to give that same little piece, come what might. As he ascended the platform and gazed at the eager young faces of his accomplices, Josephus greatly disliked to be untrue to his pledge. And yet a glance at the grim countenance of the schoolmaster suggested to him that pledges were made to be broken when unforeseen circumstances warranted. It was a trying situation. For some moments he stood thera wavering, discretion yanking at the anchor of duty. And. lo, duty held! Manfully the brave little chap began: "On Linden when the sun was " But he got no further. The teacher laid hands on him. Josephus had been brave but fool- ! ish. j Here is an exatnple of the way false reports get started. You have heard that William Jen nings Bryan goes to market with a has the stuff all delivered. There ia never any basket on his arm. Some months ago as he was walking down town from his Washington home he saw some white radishes in front of a little grocery. He paused j ;t xnoment and ordered a little meis of them sent to his home. The grocer was so pleased over acquiring so celebrated a customer that he becan to talk and press-agent hims-lf. In a few day it was In

THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

tiirouoh Tin: yi-:ak witit U)N(;rKLL()V. Henceforth bo mine a life of action ami reality! I will work in my own sphere, nor vili it other than it is. This alone is health and happiness. This alone N life. Hyperion. nil-: NICKEL'S DILEMMA. What's he going to do On a rainy Sunday night. If he's only got a nickel And the lid's on tight? Oh that lonesome coin, Where will It go, To the contribution plate Or a moving picture show? D. B. H. WE must now get to work and learn the "fan" names of the teams in our new league. This will be essential to an intelligent reading of the baseball reports. We long ago abandoned keeping track of the outside leagues. It interfered with our chosen occupation, hut we're going to be familiar with the affairs of our own league if we have to take time out of our business. ZULU ZILZ is a player on the celery bunch (Kalamazoo). Combine it with the name of the town and whizzle it. Where tlw Penalty Fits Ihe Crime, (Notre Dame Scholastic.) This verse is short and breezy, it moves like hobby horse. Its rime is rather wheezy, it has but little force: It's like the car on Hill St., which is the subject of it. Neither will move an inch until you get right out and shove it. It. V. "My little daughter," writes D. W. C, "is a philosopher. She puts this and that together and makes the other. I know,' said she, 'why you put soapsuds on your face when you shave so you'll know- when you're done. " GARY is growing bo rapidly and the demand for buildings is so great it isn't safe to leave a buil ling outdoors at night. Recently when the health officers wished to isolate a smallpox case they discovered somebody had stolen the pesthouse. Tried to Borrow An Umbrella. ?ir: The elemental row kicked up on the organ by Professor Houze in playing "The Storm" the other evening was awe-inspiring. Jove's wrathful thunderbolts were launched in such realistic fashion and with such papers about Bryan going about with a market basket. Bryan is no crank on the subject of dignity but he was not greatly pleased over the market basket tale. He wondered how it got started. About a week later a woman stopped at the same little grocery to look at some radishes. "They are very fine," said the grocer; "Mr. Bryan, the secretary of state, stops here every morning with his basket on his arm and buvs some of those." "So you're the man that started that market basket story!" exclaimed the woman. "I happen to be a neighbor and a good friend of the Bryans and I know he will be interested in learning how that got started! For you know very well that it isn't true." And the assumption is that Bryan bought his radishes there no longer. Otis Wingo, member of congress from Arkansas, has been addicted all his life to the habit of reading things that the average reader never sees odd. esoteric stuff like the congressional Record and presidential platforms. He began reading the Congressional Record almost as soon as he had finished the third reader, and kept it up, without missing an issue, until he came to congress. Then just when the average representative would be acquiring his first acquaintance with the Record Wingo quit reading it. "It doesn't seem as worth while any more, now that I know all the authors," says Wingo. Wingo knows by heart every presidential platform that has been drawn up in the last 30 years, and he is probably one of the few-men in the country who ever took the trouble to read one clear through. However, this little habit of his came in handy when he ran for congress. He was in a joint debate with his opponent and the latter used a phrase that Wingo immediately recognized as a part of the presidential platform on which McKinley ran In 1S9C. "Oh, ho." cried Wingo, "you're trying to get the nomination on the democratic ticket and you're borrowing stuff from republican platforms. Do vou think the people will stand for that!" And at' Wingo's urgent behest, the people didn't. David F. Houston. secretary of agriculture, is a good deal of a plow horse in his methods of work. He goes just so fast and no pressure of business can make him go any faster. Nothing ever ruflles him. Unfinished business toward the close of the day does not appall him. When he thinks he has done a day's work he knocks off. And having left his office behind him he thinks no more about his tasks until the morrow. (Copyright. 1914. by Fred C. Kelly. All rights reserved.) WHAT THE PAPERS SAY THE PRESIDENTS VICTORY. By a vote of 207 to 176 the house decided to close debate on the rule fixing a time to vote on the repeal bill, and then adopted the rule by a vote of 100 to 112. Out of 234 democrats who answered to their names 1 1 followed the president. Yet the organization of the house as represented by Speaker Clark, Representative Fnderwood and Representative Fitzgerald, was against him. He was opposed also by the floor leaders of the three parties Underwood. Mann and Murdock. The progressive vote was solid "in opposition and only eight republicans voted with the majority. Under such conditions the president could not possibly have won hud he not been rignt, had he not been sustained by enlightened public opinion. The victory thus is in no sense personal. It is the victory of the democratic party, of the people of the United States, and of sound principles. There are those who pretend to uiluk

mtm

effect that it was hard to believe that old Nature herself was not taking a hand in the tumult. D. "Hunt For Robber With Red Hair." Newspaper headline. The hunters, we naively assume, are redheaded. CLIFFORD THORNE, the Iowa railroad commissioner, is making himself exceedingly obnoxious to the railroad. Mr. Thorne known entirely too much about railroad business, but that is not what bothers them so much lis his habit of telling what he knows. "This," writes old J. E., "is a great year for boys in Mishawaka. One young lady against 11 bo including a pair of twins. Good old Mishawaka! Head this list from the Enterprise:" A daughter was born recently to Mr. and Mrs. William Stone. Mrs. Stone, who was critically ill. is much better. A son was born March 19ti to Mr. and Mrs. George Deitchler, Kast Sixth street. A son was born March 19ta to Mr. and (Mrs. W. Lloyd Minzey, 3 21 West Marion street. A son was born March l'Jt'i to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Culp. A son was born March 19th to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Beutter, of south of the city. A son born to Mr. and Mrs. John Ackubassen, 112 East Eleventh street, March ISth. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Keeno of Iaporte, March 18. Mrs. Keene was formerly Miss Myrtle Maltby. daughter of J. C. Maltby. Mishawaka. A son was born Sundav to Mr. and Mrs. Glen Roe. 30 6 West Joseph street. A oa was born Sundav to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Clauson. 2 2 4 West Lawrence street. A son was born March 2 0th at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Zeiger. six miles southeast of the city. Twin sons were born Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kronewitter, residing east of the city. A RECENT writer or a writer recently dwells on the advantage of eating intelligently. We are familiar with this class of boarders. They are so much more familiar with the diet than with the calendar that they say each day is named for the lerJing dish which regularly reappears. .Such as corned beef and cabba-ge day, bean day, fish day, roast pork day, and so on through the seven. While perhaps not a fool in your mind. You may be one of the April kind. C. N. F. that the democratic party will be weakened as a result of yesterday's division in its ranks. There is no danger of that. The other parties are the ones that will suffer. The people will remember that only eight, republicans voted with the majority, and that the progressives furnished not one vote to the right side. If the influential men in these parties are wise they will see to it that some of their representatives vote for the repeal bill, thus making the most of the opportunity that is left to them. The democratic party comes out of the struggle stronger than ever. This cannot be said of the republican and progressive parties. Unity in a bad causo always weakens. There can not he the slightest doubt j of the feelings of the people. They do j not desire that their country should become an "outlaw" among nations. Por year.-? they have strongly opposed j the ship subsidy policy opposed it so 1 fiercely that a congress dominated by I Mark Hanna and tne standpatters was ' unable to pass a subsidy law. The American people are unwilling to do the wrong thing simply for the purpose of "punishing" a nation that is not liked by some of our citizens. It is intolerable to Americans that their policy should be influenced by old j world quarrels and hates. It. is to i them unthinkable that an American'j congress should tear up a treaty simply j because some thing it is a hard bargain. When men look abroad they 5ee that the whole civilized world, of which we must be a part, and with which we must have relations, is hostile to the interpretation of the treaty that permits discrimination in favor of our coastwise trade. South America is as much interested as Europe, and continental Europe Is as much interested as Great Britain. When, therefore, it is proposed to go counter to world opinion on a matter of world interest, simply for the purpose of subsidizing a greedy monopoly, public opinion interposes its veto. Every one knows that our foreign relations are not what they should be. The president solemnly-assured congress that reoeal of this toll exemption provision was the indispensable first step to settin;; them right. The people believe him, as th ?y well may do. The first thing is to assure the world that when we make a treaty we shall abide by it. We must undo the bad work of the last few years, and restore our foreign policy to its ori ginal high estate. South America, for instance, knows that we "took" Pan ama in fiat violation of our treaty with Colombia. The pasage of this repeal bill will do much to reassure our neighbors. The president is right, and he was sustained for that reasc n. We have no doubt that congress will follow his leadership. Indianapolis News. Twenty Years Ago Itemlixters From the- Columns cf The Doily Times. St. Joseph captured the county seat of Berrien county. Mich., after i. hard fight. Over 10.00'J votes were cast and St. Joseph's majority was only 3iy. In the case of I). R. Kavanaugh vs. the city for $5,000 damages for injuries received from falling on a sidewalk the jury returned a verdict for the city. m Clem W. Studebaker is here from Marion. Ind. Mrs. .am O'Brien has returned from a visit to Detroit. Miss Mae Tescher has returned from a visit to Elkhart. Mrs. Frank Ambos and son have returned from Chicago. C. B. Turrell moved from Olive Branch to the citv. Harry C. Wright and Miss Millie M. Ingram were married by Rev. N. I). Williamson at the parsonage cf the Reformed church. Miss Maria Studebake- z.iade aprons from 150 yards of gingh. . and sold them for the benefit of the poor. Dr. C. Stoltz was elected vie president of th? Alumni association of the College of Physicians and Surueons, Chicago.

TOO MUCH TING-AUNG! BUT ASIDE FROM THAT. A NICE LITTLE WEDDING

XM I Id mm a i - w-r I-..

PARKE RXBFRG. W. Ya.. March 30. Miss Rao Aurora Archer doesn't believe in waiting too long at the church and she. thinks it's unluckv to miss the train when you're going on a wedding trip. So wtoui the minister who was to make Rae Aurora Mrs. Harry Butcher failed to show up, the bride-elect took the groom-elect by the arm and they marathoned away to a street car. 3E 1 H IO

Will insure your health by keeping the air cool, clean and pure your family against accidents from fire, burns, explosions, or injury through falling. Now that Spring is about to be ushered in you will be cleaning house. . Again you are confronted by the same old problem of repapering those rooms and buying new decorations and so it is every year, so long as you use an inferior open flame illuminant that is blackening and blistering your ceilings and walls. When you have electricity in your home you have the only clean and convenient as well as the safest illuminant that has ever been put on the market. The tungsten lamp has made Electric Service so economical, -that every home, large or small can afford it. Our special housewiring plan makes it easy for every housekeeper to install and enjoy electrical comforts. We are wiring houses and furnishing fixtures at actual COST of time and material required, allowing twelve months to pay without interest. Furthermore we give THREE MONTHS FREE light to anyone wiring an already built house. Call 462 either phone and ask our representative to call.

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r LADiES' READY-TO WEAR 6 CoaNER Michigan a Jeffcrscn

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"Havo a minister at the Unth-s'. tier." was the message she h -d phoned ahead. The mimst r -there. He was boosted onto the , the conductor cut out hi pb ase." and a-, ted as b-st man. The bride and uro.-m got their t: . the minister ;Jmost :;ot nervous ;! tration from the ;e.r to Ins dignity, .u. the conductor may g t f ired for ing "fares" and "att r.ding a weddi:. while on iliitv." ft ! i 4 1 i !?J if (! 11 ii if Mich lcnigan i i Company ii Cxjlfax Ave. - r ' - - 6 Masteroieees P JL 1 umoing 5 that's V v. -'.v our -ierit :: work !s referred t by our s.tt:.-t! d eii-?i;TH. We ,jo no . io-ar w.ri; V- ; ,; in fining f f r thing ;is v. 'A :i a m :. e.f plumber ran t ' it and a. irking iOcorulne to the e.f il nr.- ir r e. frr employ r."t time. T;ike no employ us r.et t;rr.e Take rw chances' THOMAS WILLIAMS V2'2 F. .JefTeroii RUd. Homo Phoiu- rf9l. Bell Phone 29