South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 295, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 October 1914 — Page 6

TiiriisD.w. octoiii:h is. ion

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND

THE NEWS-TIMfcS IJO Wf?t CoIf.iT Avnup. Kntered a. pcnd elafs matter at t Dally and year . . Sunday in 15.00

Sunday, .dnisl- copy Zc HY M All IV.ily and Sunday In advance per year ? 4.00 Daily, Jn advance, pr year J 3.00 If jour name appear? In thn telephone directory you can telephone f our nant 'ad" to The Newp-Tlms office and a bill will be mailed after its nsertion. Horn phone lll; Hell phone 2100. CONK. LORRNZKN A WOODMAN Foreign Advertising Representatives. 125 Fifth Aventi-, N-w York. Advertising Bulldlnc, Chicago

SOUTH HLNR, INDIANA, OCTOBKK 15, 1911.

DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL. Kon r. V. Mt eiy. l- J it l.ini DISI'IIKT UIlPliLSKNTATIVJ Heurj- A. li.irnh.'irt. 5TATE. F.i: SECHIITAUY or STATC-IIonier L. i o.k. Vtm Al'lUTOU OF STATE Ifcile J. frittt'iibergf r. TKHASLTtLU OF S rATU Jorge V. Ultiler. run sltt. ruiiLic insthiction riitrlt-4 A. JriMthuuMe. mil JULmJI-; Sl'i'KKMi: COL'ItT Moe. li. I.iirj. FOIL JUSTICES Of ATPKLLATK CUUKTJoidnii (;. li U, Fre.leri- k M. Caldwell. Milton K. iJottel. Edward V. Felt and Fr:uik M. rower. FOK CLCKK OF SUrilEMK COUKT J. Frrd Frame. fok Arronynv oknkkal-itichrd Mi! burn. FOR STATE C.KOLOUIST Edward liarrett. LEGISLATIVK. FOR STATE SENATOR Gabriel It. Summer. roii stat i unn:i-:si:NTATivn Y. II!r fttid Ch-irH A. ITiccrty. FOIt JOINT KKI'ItirSFNTATI VD Peter A. FMlmer. PUHDIC WANTS TO KNOW. Mr. Home C. Stephenson, vice president nnd treasurer of the St. Joseph County Havings Hank and Trust Co., along -with others who addressed the convention of the American Hankers association at Richmond. Va Tuesday, in similar vein, mistake the spirit of the age if they anticipate any considerable public sympathy for their contentions that Sec'y McAdoo of the treasury department was wrong in his recent use of the press in bringing certain bankers to time for hoarding their surplus and charging usurious interest of borrowers. The secretary contends that such conduct is contrary to the spirit if not the letter of the federal reserve bank act in which c;u the only responsive chord, criticism of the secretary is likely to find, will be In the breasts of the bankers. Mr. Stephenson puts it, as quoted in the dispatches, that the secretary should have written the bankers u letter, taking them to task privately rather than to rush int print and tlount his criticisms before the public. He does not give the secretary credit for having done that very thing. He does not state that the secretary reported to the expedient of publicity only after he had been virtually told by a number of bankers who thought they had the regional bank law beaten by clever legal constructions. that he should "mind his own busincss" or words to that effect. And what he did was to mind his own business. It is the secretary of the treasury's business to mind the public's business, and the tendency at Washington Just now seems to be that when a law Is placed on the statute books, no avalanche of wise lawyers will be permitted to teach the evasion of it, and their advice be followed, without the public being kept informed. And that it is an effective way of meeting such a situation is proven qulte conclusively by the wincing that j It has produced. The federal reserve currency law will amount to nothing as a currency reform measure unless it is mnde to reform and it would be no reform to let matters tdide along just r-s they did before. This la not the tlrt time that publicity has been used as a "bis stick" with which to maintain decorum. The people like it too. They like to know what is going on and where to place the blame, for things. The masses of mankind are inclined to be fair and jr.ut when they have the data to be fir and just with and that is what the secretary of the treasury placed before them, viz.: the data. HAD Till: "ITNt'H" ALL RKHIT. Journalists pleading the case of the A. O. R., meaning "Ancient Order of Republicans" are pointing out inci dent to .Scc'y William Jennmgs Hryan's j b recent visit to Indiana, that his en- ; thusiasm was a minus quantity and his old "punch" lacking. They said at tirst that he wouldn't come. Then they had it that he wouldn't say a word in favor of the Indiana d b nation in congress, or the state ticket. but be came and did everything that it was said that he wouldn't do. And to what el-- could you expect from an agr-K"ion of tal- prophets but that they should try to minimize their blunder as the cry of "halfh artedness," talking '"under prsiure"' and othr .uu'ru-s indicate'.' Anyone who heard Col. Hran in his Indiana addre.-M-s knows that the present republican pitu n.-e is jut as fal.e as tile recent prophecy, but we Will suppoe for once, juat for the sake of being -lenerous. that the truth has accid'-ntally ! n sp-ik :i. Vou n;ut re-nem'.er that u'n r the Wilton adr;:m:trati.u tne t objr.el lia.-n't the VA at that v.er ; h'. pr '. itn.. the "pa:;. t .-tily, but allow u- to Jim H men w n .1 e to punch" n s . i y to of at tne Time o; t n e i w t i i .'nil is ma s.:,!i . l.il r.ebv w uy k . h..t : s. J ! ?n i: c o i u i 1 m r o n 9 las become of Watson's, and "pura liesV" If few' tther obJ-tiiiiTl'

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Daily, single copy 2c TICKET. 8T. JO sT. I' 1 1 COUNTY. FOR HLTEHIOK COURT JL'DCJK(Je.rfr Ford. FOK PROSECUTING ATTORNEY CLesler R. Montgomery. FOR SHERIFF Charles Bailer. FOR AUDITOR Arthur Wolf. FOR RECORDER Rert K. Kljsz. FOR CLERK iieorpe Raab. FOR TREASURER Fr-d 7. Martin. FOR ASSESSOR John M. Truax. FOR SURVEYOR Henderson MK.Mellan. FOR CORONER-Thomas J. Swantz. COMMISSIONERS (Middle District). Thooiaa William; (Western UlsiP'-t), J W. Miller. COUNCILMEN ut-iarM-Neon T. Riley, Melville W. Mix an I Fr;im Mayr. Jr. l'OItTAGK TOWNjlIir. FOR TRUSTEE Jus A. KUntflcr. FOR ASSESSOR Joseph Voorc.e. FOR JUSTICES OF THE l'EACI-J. Elmer Peak nnd Joseph V. WypizrnU. FOR CONSTARLCS Robert A. Beyrer and Andrew FItzkanltz. v.oi. nryan p0Ke "naif-heartedly" and -,. I T i ... . - . . . unaer pressure will someone please ! explain under what sort of pressure Ilemcnway. Watson, ct al., are maintaining such a "whole-hearted" silence ? Careful now, gentlemen, and don't all speak at once. Think twice, and then talk to yourself, would be your safer procedure. The public knows why they are not being heard. It is because their "punch" is what has put the republican, party in eternal disgrace in Indiana, just as did that of Barnes in New York. Penrose in Pennsylvania, and Foraktr in Ohio. It requires no great stretch of intelligent perception to make out from the republican discomfiture that has followed Col. Hryan's visit, that he brought just "punch" enough along with him to make the "A. O. R." feel like turning over in its grave and the noise that we hear is the scratching of long toe-nails on cloven-feet trying to catch a brace on the bottom of the casket. DUTY FIRST, NOT POLITICS. The spectacle of democratic congressmen and senators remaining on duty and putting emergency legislation through to Uelp their country rather than go home to their cam paigns is one of the most commendable exhibitions of patriotism our country has ever seen. With the world's greatest crisis on in the European war, with Unitea Sff?tes industrial and financial conditions all demoralized by the sudden cessation of trade with Europe, and with possible complications in our foreign relations as the result of seven leading nations of the world being at war, and Mexico still unsettled, Pres't Wilson and the democratic house and senate are trying manfully and unselfishly to formulate plans of safety for us that is surely a blessing to our people. This is why Sen. Shively and Hep. Rarnhart are not at home answering J their political opponents who are trying to take advantage of a critical situation and induce the people to ote for those who. if elected, would oppose Pres't Wilson in his efforts to preserve peace and conserve our wellbeing financially. If Woodrow Wilton is right, as all fair-minded men admit he is, then Shively r.nd Rarnhart who are standing by the president are right. And inasmuch as they are right in their fidelity to Pres't Wilson's peace and popular legislation policies, they should be reward ?d for their faithfulness to duty by all friends of good government rallying to their support and in opposition to those who would misrepresent them and try thereby to defeat them in the election, when thev i are doing their duty and letting their political interests take care of themes. That's the kind of representatives the people need in congress. It is the kind the people will again vote for. ri:t:nci: tax ni:ci:ssitv. If there be those who oppose the present necciity or raising more gov- ; eminent revenue than the income tax , and the tariff duties now offered ouri country, they either do not understand existing conditions, or they would use our present unfortunate situation, as the result of the raging war in Kuiupt., as a means of partisan ; advantage. hn the Maropean war unexpectedly broke out on August brst. our income tax and tarit't duties revenues were ample to nuvt ali neds of the government. Cut with the tirst declaration of war, imports from Lngland, France. ti-.: :;,aiiy, Relgium. A'.tria ai d otiier Kur;K-an cou:tti ics J s-.nidenlv ceased for th" doii le reas n and that I that fhippinu w.is ..irdou goods on hur.d in ih". co.mtrie I 1 1 v 1 iuuu. u j ' v . i y. 4 ' i i , M " ' i l i ' , " needed f-'T home O'r.s.umpii. during the war. This shrinkage in imports cut iovvn our go . ei rtmeju's im erne s it would soon be neevv.-ary to call in the government ii i scattered anions tiie lank and th;s would -ia e

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would have been netded eventually. anyhow. So Pres't Wilson, with his good foresight ana his patriotic frankness told congress how the war had short1 cried our income, how our bank re- j , serves ?hould be protected, and how j j it is the duty of congress to at once j .make provision for the war, which. i caused deficit, and it is being done. Some politicians begged the presi- ; dent to delay consideration of this j matter until after the flection as it i might injure the democratic party. Hut the reply was. "duty should never 1 be subordinated to politic when peril threatens." It was the Wilson way j of doing thines that need to be done and congress will not adjourn until this emergency work is finished. Do your Christmas shopping early is a phrase so badly worn that it is threadbare, but this year it is given a r.ew significance by the importance of keeping salespeople employed. This in addition to eliminating the usual Christmas rush. The story of a German spy disguising himself as an Kast Inriian trooper seems almost incredible, in view of German individuality. Wouldn't you know a German in any disguise ? The very fact that the old organization has been thrown in the discard is an assurance that the Chamber of Commerce is headed In the right direction this time. Tliu automobile is said by the president of Drown university to be as demoralizing to students as booze. It la joy of another kind and hardly less intoxicating. Speaking of the weather, present conditions are more sanitary than that summery stuff the bureau has been giving us. and there's mora ginger in it. The Mexican idea of permanent peace is the elimination of the opposition, and in Mex. elimination is capital punishment. The disbandment of the aerial circus organization should not mean the abandonment of the purpose for which it was formed. In choosing an occupation a playing position on a championship baseball i.eam has its attractions, also its uncertainties. "Life is short, but art is long," is exemplified In Antwerp, where it is said the Germans have spared the art treasures. Just as Przemysl is becoming easy the Russians have abandoned it and dropped out of the war news. As an example of culture the Roston R raves at the moment represent the highest development in ight. The (Jermans may not be able to take Paris, but they seem to be geting other things they want. If the Germans get those long distance guns ii operation it will save a lot of marching. TWENTY YEARS AGO Reminders From the Columns of The Dally Tlmee. Lucian W. .Snyder is on the sick list Leo Tomazeskl has returned from his Mississippi trip. Mrs. D. It. Kiefer is visiting in Elkhart. The Hebrew Ladies' Henevolent sorioty reorganized for the winter's work. James Huey birthday. cfb'brated his 90th ) CJ Tir HceUv--)ort Weekly Whang offers n prize fer th let sonj dedicated ter that newspaier. Soy Roan, our village cut -up. siiggots a rag." solving; it. The doctor told him he needed carbohvdrates. proteids, and, above all. something nitrogeneii5. The doctors mentioned a long list for him to eat. j He staggered out and wabbled into aj 1'enn avenue restaurant. j "How about beefsteak?" he asked, the waiter. "Is that nitrogeneous V The waiter didn't know. "Are fried potatoes rich in carbohydrates or not?" Tiie waiter couldn't say. "Weil, I'll fix it." declared the poor man in despuir. "Rring me a large plate of hash." ITS AND DOWNS. R C. Kskri our merchant, has beer smokinu two different grades of ciwrars this Mimim r. When it comes a good showr of rain and crtis begin to b-ok up a littb". .Mr. Rskridge will S!n'ke a five-cent cigar, but when. the dry weather comes agr.in and everything beuir.s to look gloomy, he t-mokts tbo:--- kind that you can buy three for a nickel. Hoxie (Ark.) enterprise. motor - ;ime Se-Kitioti. M.'.d:'" Co you really like it-.g as 'Veil a sleigh riding? arjorie I don't see much difnce !in:c Charley h.:s learned to the i ;r; w ith one hau l. Judge. A CONCi:sR)N. St. nographer If Pivtty St. nographer If I marry u I give lip a silary of $2 5 a week. Arthur Coodlooks Not at all! As :i hpi'i-i! nri.ilece ou mav keeit on i u t,r;-inC ju J,

2i

COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

SIX MONTHS WITH POI7TS AND PHILOSOPHERS. I am confirmed a woman can Iau this or that or any man: Tliis day she melting hot. Tomorrow wcar .-lie knows you not; If but a new object find. Then straight she's of another mind. Then linns: mo ladles ftt your door, If e'er I doat upon you more. Sir John Suckling. The infirmatics of this stasie of life (afire) would be much fewer if we did not affect tho-3 which attend the more vigorous and active part of our days; but instead of studying to be wiser, or beins contented with our present follies, the ambition of many of us is ai-so to le the same sort of fools we formerly hae hce-n. Steele. MANY conceptions of good citizenship prevail. Most prevalent is that which contemplates conformity with the law and a general air of responsibility, compounded with a tendency to attend exclusively to one's own business in the narrowed, not to say selfish sense. there is a better conception than that, involving the virtues we nave enumerated but extending to a enumerated but extending to a sense of responsibility and regard for the community interest. The citizen who obeys the law, pays his taxes and keeps his children in school is doing well, but not as much as he should. As a member of the community and a stockholder in the municipal corporation he is under obligations to do his share of the community work. SO. ME of the old residents will be reminded of the fall of '96 when Shively and Devcridge come together. CHAKLLS LAMH ON ROAST PIG. (Essays of Elia.) Of all the delicacies in the whole mundus edibilis, I will maintain it to be the most delicate princeps obsoniorum. I speak not of your grown porkers things between pig and pork those hobbydehoys but a young and tender suckling under a moon old guiltless as yet of the sty with no riginal speck of the amor immundltiae, the hereditary failing of the first parent, yet manifest his voice as yet not broken, but something between a childish treble and a grumble the mild forerunner, or peludium, of a grunt. He must be roasted. I am not ignorant that our ancestors ate them seethed, or boiled but what a sacrifice of the exterior tegument! There is no flavour comparable. I will contend, to that of the crisp, tawny, WHAT THE WITH MILITANCY IN RFriRi:MMNT. "Th. tnvt Ti-iriiutnoiit i ovnpptp,! t n undertake a thorough discussion of the women's suffrage question." From a dispatch from London. While the hat-smashing, churchburning, hunger-striking campaign was on, the suffrage question could not get before the Rritish parliament If it used a siege gun. Now that the militants have declared a truce on account of the war, thereis a fair, prospect that the "Votes for Women" cause will get a fair and reasonable hearing. The Knglishman Is like all other men in this that he hates like sin to be forced into doing anything. Who can doubt that woman suffrage in America is stronger and more advanced simply because its advocates were wise enough to avoid borrowing a page Irom tne campaign dook oi tho ladies Pankhurst? Toledo Blade. IIULLETIX FROM Till: HOSPITAL. The oatient's temperature has be

come practically normal. He shows ; jocularly said in th last century of a few- sUns of febrile excitement i Rritish statesman actively and eloHc has wholly recovered from the quently identiiied with the spinning

shock of the. severe operation to which he was avoidably on unwillingly, but unhis part, subjected about Aug. 1. He is taking all the nourishment he can get and showing an increasing interest in schemes tor getting more liis mental condition has greatly improved. He no longer talks about DUttiny: un the shutters of his ware house or hanging crape on his door knob. He is showing signs f impatience to get out and go to work again. He! is, in fact, out part of the day and working hard on some new enetrp rises. Translated into the language of the hospital bulletin, that is the present condition of that distin guished patient. American business. as shown by the tact that 7, 13C more of his freight cars were . at j .. l.i work on Sent. 15 than on Sept. 1. His complete recovery, with some rh.-m.-e in direction of activities, i-cciallv to the southward, may be es contidently predicted. Chicago Hex old (Ind. Till WAR TANKS. Tli. iihv.inittMtinn i to be COIllmended for its decision to impose a a a v ta i kiaaaAa'v v stamp taxes, similar to those of Span- ' ' ' iwi u-ir tlii-.m i-.ithfP th:in .'1 ST'eCial tax on freight. The plans for tax;i - tion, as agreed to in the democratic caucus. Include a stamp tax on coin-

mereial and legal papers, and special ; ow nership of king. taxes on banks, brokerage bouses, j There seems little doubt :hat King theaters and other places of amuse- , Charles was- anxious to inolve his ment -taxes w hich were applied dur-i country in tiie var. Tlure .s as little ing the Spanish war. There will also j doubt thai the country did not want be a tax of two cents a gallon on gas-! t,, be invohed. In the end the view oline. and special taxes on tobacco ;(,f the country prevailed and Roumanufacturers and dealers, and "U-niania for the present, at least redomestic wines ami beor. it is est;-! niains at peace. mated that $ lo:,.0e'.0' n NVl11 : (' Then i one thing tiiat ci.n i-e said tained from' these various .-o;:rces j (,f those little Ralkan states. They ?:'..".'' oi.e.n.' mm ihe sta.r.p tax: own and o; -rale their kin-ts. Their M".i.0(oi from hankers and biokers; kings are n.- er r.Uo. ed to presume

M.'00.n00 from b e, from tobacco; "...uo,.to,.t $-0.00veu'j from gasoline and ce.eee from wine In i-fVertintr to the stanm tax of the Spanish war. the ileniocrats -lio.ed ! both wisdom and ability to follow tne ! good example set by another party, for j it w;tS tiu. republican party which, in 1 '. . de lseU tne stamp tax ;eni which worked so well and was so productive of revenue. The value of a

stamp tax i that it is direct. The fal-. and at worst a positive public 'danger, laeiou theory which ' attracted sup-j I'ubli" ownership of kings has made porters of the proposed tax on irelght g:tul triiits in Lur. pe s'.m-e the hewas that the cost would be di.-trib-! ginning of tr. nineteenth century. Rut

utetl. Keen so, but by tiiis very di: tribution it wotihl be multiplied many i times, and the burdens thus much in-icrcjs-1- A stamp tav ought also to

ELTING POT

well watched, not over-roasted crack-' ling, as it Is well called the very, teeth are invited to their share of the pleasure at this banquet in overcoming the coy, brittle resistance with the adhesive oleaginous O call it not fat but an indefinable sweetness growing up to it the tender blossom- ' ing of fat fat cropped in the bud. in the first innocence the cream and ( quintessence of the child pig's yet 1 pure food the lean, no lean, but a kind of animal manna or rather, fat and lean (if it must be so) so blended j and running Into each other that both together make but one ambrosian re- j suit, or common substance. YES, thank you, we would like another helping of the ambrosial result. Ol'Il OWN HEX KING (Raymond Hrunke in iSt. Herald.) Don't ou hear the wisting Joseph of the i wnd? ; Can't vou hear what It seems to say? if

Isn't it calling for its own Ben King?M Don't you think it knows he's gone j away? ( J Isn't that his old grapevine swing? j i

Isn't that his own cool, sparkling spring f Doesn't it seem sad during the even- j t ing glow? ! T" -v - foil l- i - 1 ' 1 nrt olr M Arr fVaiC luit k i in- i in u luiivij tvu iv Old St. Joe? Don't the buds seem to hate to raise f i on wing? it' iinn't v-.m think th.t th rrirkets feel his mood? Aren't they mourning Ren King? for their own Isn't there a deep silence through the wood ? Don't sou think that's his old, old swimming hole? Can't you see how the bass wood leaves begin to roll? Doesn't the river seem to have a sluggish flow? Don't you think its lonely 'long the Old .St. Joe? WHEN our neighbor's kid comes to the door and wants to be let in he walks around the porch awhile and looks in with a grin. We tell him we have got no time to fool with kids like him, we got so much to do just now we're chock full to the trim, and then the grin will disappear behind his facial grime, and "Shucks!" he says, "It seems to me you're workm' all the time!" IT is so much easier to spend money when one has it than to make it when one hasn't it that its reasonable accumulation should excite our admiration. The horrors of war, at first it. seemed, Could never be endured, Hut time and repetition serve To make us quite inured. C. X. F. PAPERS SAY f produce results more quickly than a i freight tax, and with less expense of I collection. The democratic members of congress were divided on the ques- i tion and for a time a break between j congress and the president seemed j possible. i These special taxes will, cf course, be imposed only as long as wir condi- ; tions make them necessary. They j should be regarded as burdens to be ; borne only until the ordinary revenue i of the national government is restored. It will be noticed that the burden of taxation rests on tobacco, wines and beer a total of $4 4,000,00. The remaining portion of the $105,000, 00J total will be divided among various j sources. The stamp tax is the heaviest , single item, but it will Tie more easily j borne and more easily removed than a . tax on freight. An agreement having ! been reached in congress, these ex j traordinary taxes will probably soon be imposed. Indianapolis News. VISIONARY COTTON PROJECTS. ,omi! of the current suggestions with respect to cotton recall what was industry. Apropos of a report that scientists had removed the brain of a. turtle and filled the cavity with cotton without causing any perceptible change in the creature's life it was remarked that somebody must have surreptitiously performed a similar operation upon the statesman in question. Sir Charles Maeara, president of the Knglish Cotton Manufacturers association, wants the American and Rritish government: to jointly buy up all the surplus of the cotton crop and hold it "in reserve' . This substan tially means that he would have the two governments "go long c f " cotton speculate in the staple with the money of the peoples. Rep. Henry of Texas wculd have our own government issue a couple of hundred millions of greenbacks and -C'H a c bonds. 1 ouple of hundred millions of 1 bonds, the whole to be used in susc'y j taining the price of cotton, i McAdoo deserves credit for his vivid ' demonstration of the impossibility of mis scneme. 1 ne cotton situation is one to he dealt with by the planters and the bankers and not b the federal government. New York Herald. . PI RI.IC OWNKRsHlP OI KINtJS. The death of. King Charles of RouI miti':i i nf cniirv.i. i- T-f.ttol.K- T-fnt 1 happily it did not come l.efore the world had been given a striking illustration of the advantages of public too much. Under all the trappings of royalty there is the substantial fact of public ownership of the entire- institution of monarchy. If a country is bound to hae a king, obviously tiiat is tiie only conditio. i on which it can afford to have him. Th- king who thinks he owns tine country, the king who assume- to rule by a title superior to :h pu blic luxurv i "111, IS .11 in .""l i r.vu.-m tr.e w on; s not et coimdet-. Theie still remain a few royal ho.i es to be bio an. hi into line and mad-' i kr.o.v their proper places. -Chicago iieraid.

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