South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 299, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 October 1914 — Page 9
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
MOYDAY, OCTOIHTII If). 1911.
HTILSOH
PHASES
D ESEMT CONGRESS President in Letter to Majority Leader Underwood Expresses Admiration For Way Promises Were Carried Out. WASHI.VOTOIV. Oct. IS. Pros't "Wilson ma-Ie public Sunday a letter to Majority Tador Underwood of the house In which ho roviewrd the achievements of ha administration . nd outlined the program for the next .es ion ofoonprc.:-?. The letter U to take the place of a PTFonal appeal for votes which tho president Intimates h would Ilk to make In every congressman's district. It follows: The Whit House. WASHINGTON. Oct. 17, "My Dear Mr. Underwood: "I cannot let this session 1914. of conpre: close without expressing my warm admiration for the fidelity and intelligence with which the program outlined In April and December of last year haa been carried out. and my felins that the people of tho country have been served by . the members of this congress as they have seldom. If ever, been served be fore. Tho progress was a great one, i and It Is a matter of great satisfaction to think of the way in which It has been handled. "It had several distinct parts and many items, but, after nil, a single purpose, namely, to destroy private control and set business free. That purpose wa3 manifest enough In the case of the tariff and in the legilatlon affecting trusts; but, though perhaps less evident upon the surface there. It lay at the very heart of the currency bill, too. May I not add. rven though It lies outside the fold of legislation, that that, and that chiefly, has been tho object of the foreign policy of tho government during the last IS months? llld IScliinil Tariff. "Private control has shown its sinister face on every hand in America, had phown it for a long time, and somn times very brazenly, in the trusts and In a virtual domination of credit by small groups of men. The safest hiding place and covert of such control was in tho tariff. There it for a long time hid very shrewly. The tarif was a very complicated matter; nino but experts thoroughly understood its schedules. Many of tho schedules wero framed to afford par ticular advantage s to special groups j of manufacturers and investors. That was the soil in which trade combinations and combinations of manufacturers most readily grew and most rankly. "High prices did not spring directly out of the tariff. T hose ppra.ni? out of the suppression of domestic, no less than of foreign, competition by means of combinations and trade agreements which could be much more easily contrived and manufactured under the) protection of a high tariff than without it. Tho European war came before tho withdrawal of this much coveted opportunity for monopoly -ould show its full effects anil activo competition bring prices to their normal level again; but it is clear enough already that the reduction of the tariff, the simplification of its schedules so as to cut away the jungle in which secret agencies hail so long lurked, th redirection of its inequalities, and its thorough recasting with the single honest object of revenue, were an indisprnslble. first step to reestablishing competition. IiOhby Is Driven Away. "The present congress has taken that step with courage, sincerity, and effectiveness. The lobby by which som of the worst features of the old tariff had been maintained was driven away by the mere pitiless turning on of the light. The principle was adopted that each duty levied was to lie tested by the inquiry whether it was put at such a figure and levied in .such a manner as to provoke competition. Tho soil in which combinations had grown was removed lest some of the seeds of monopoly might be found to remain in it. The thing bad needed to be dune for a lni? time but nobody had ventured before to undertake it in systematic fashion. "The panic that the friends of privilege had predicted did not follow. Business has already adjusted itself to tho new conditions with singular ease and elasticity, because the new eonditions are in favt more normal ski! gives natural haauty to skin and Aair There cm be no comparison botwetin a vatiirclly beautiful complexion ar.d one of tho defects of which are covered up. Re.inol Soap helps you tahavatha riht kind of ekin. It Ls a delightfully pure soap, perfectly suited to everyday u in the toilet and bath. Yet to it are aiUed gentle iu'-Jinoiljalsanis. TheQ stimulate the pores to healthy activity, allay irritations, and prevent or overcome the complexion defects which are so often cnusod by neglect, improper treatment, or tho ils of arlinciaJ oida to btauty. PoU I t all droxyl.t. For m f r
Res
than the old. The revenue io.t by the import duties was replaced by an income tax which in part shifted the burden of taxation from th shoulders of ew-ry consumer in the country, great or f-mall. to boulders certainly able to bear it. "We had time to learn from the act administration of the law that the revenue resulting from the double change, would h;iwj been abundant had it not been for the breaking out of th" present war in Kurp-. which affects almost every route of tr.'ide and every market in the world outside of the United States. Until the war ends and until its effects upon manufacture and commerce haw been corrected we shall have to impose additional taxes to make up for the losn fsueh part of our import duties as the war cuts off, by cutting off the imports themselves a veritable war tax, though we are not at war; for war, and only war, i the cause of it. KciIik tion Came J"irt. "It" is fortunat that the reduction of the duties came first. The import duties collected tinder the old tariff constituted a much larger proportion of the whole revenue of the government than do the duties under the new. A still larger proportion of the revenue would have been cut off by the war had the old taxes stood, and a larger war tax would have been necessary as a consequence. No miscalculation, no lack of foresight, has created the necessity for the taxes, but only a great catastrophe world-wide-in its operation and effects. "With similar purpose and in a like temper the congress has sought, in the trade commission bill and in the Clayton bill, to make men in a small way and to kill monopoly In the seed. Hefore these bills were passed the law was already clear enough that monopolies once formed were illegal and could be dissolved hy direct process of law and those who had created them punished as for crime. Hut there was no law to check the process by which monopoly was built up until the tree was full grown and its fruit fully developed, or, at any rate, until the full opportunity for monopoly had been created. "With this new legislation there is clear and sufficient law to check and destroy the noxious growths in its infancy. . Monopolies are built up by unfair methods of competition, and the new trade commission has power to forbid and prevent unfair competition, whether upon a big scale or upon a little; whether just begun or grown old and formidable. Monopoly is created also by putting the same men in charge of a variety of business enterprises, whether apparently related or unrelated to one another, by means of interlocking directorates. That the Clayton bill now in large measure prevents. Each enterprise must depend upon the intelligence and business energy of the men who officer it. And so all along the line: Monopoly is to be cut off at the roots. Laborer (Jets Justice. N "Incidentally, justice has been done tho laborer. I lis labor is no loncer to be treated as if it were merely an inanimate object of commerce disconnected from the fortunes and happbness of a living human being, to be dealt with as an object of sale and barter. Hut that, great as it is. is hardly more than the natural and inevitable corollary of a law whose object is individual freedom and initiative as against any kind of private domination. "Tho accomplishment of this legislation seems to me a singularly significant thing. If our party were to be called upon to name the particular point of principle in which it differs rom its opponents most sharply and in which it feels itself most definitely sustained by experience, we should no doubt say that it was this: That we would have no dealings with monopoly, but reject it altogether; while our opponents were ready to adopt it into the realm of law, and seek merely to regulate it and moderate it in its operation. It is our purpose to destroy monopoly and maintain competition as the only effectual instrument of business liberty. "We have seen the nature and the power of monopoly exhibited. We know that it is more apt to control government than to be controlled by it; for we have seen it control government, dictate legislation, and dominate executives and courts. We feel that our people are safe -only in the fields of free. individual endeavor where American genius and initiative are not guided by a few men as in recent years, but made rich by the activities of a multitude, as in ia.s now almost forgotten. We will not consent that an ungovernable giant should bo reared to full stature in the verv household of the government itself. Democracy of Credit. "In like manner by the currency bill we have created a democracy of credit such as has never existed in this country before. For a generation or more we have known and admitted that we had the worst banking and currency system in the world, because the volume of our currency was wholly inelastic; that is, because there was more than enough at certain seasons to meet the demands of commerce and credit, and at other times far too little; that we could not lessen the volume when we needed less nor increase it when we needed more. I'verybody talked about the absurd system and its quite unnecessary cm1 arrassments, sure to produce periodic panics and everybody aid that it ought to be changed and changed very radically: but nobody took effective steps to change it until the present congress addressed itself to the task with genuine resolution and an intelligence which expressed Itself in definite action. And now the thing is done. "let bankers explain the technical features of the new system. "Sutlice it here to say that it provides a currency which expands as it is needed, and contracts when it is not needed; a currency which comes into existence in response to the call of every man who can show a going business and a concrete basis for extending credit to him. however obscure or prominent he may bo. however big or little his business transitions. Hankers Can't Control. "More- than that, the power to direct tins system of credits is put 'nto the hands of the public "oarl of disinterested otl'icers of the government itself who can make no money out of anything they do in connection vih it. No group of bankers anyivhere can get control; no one part of the country can concentrate tho advantages and conveniences of the system upon itself for its own selfish advantage. The hoard can oblige the banks of one region to o t the assistance of the banks of another. The whole resources of the country are mobilized, to be employed where they are most needed. I think we are justified in speaking of this as a democracy of credit. Credit is at the dispesai of every man who can show energy and assets. Cac h re.rion of the country is set to study its own i.eeds and opportunities and th' whole country stand to assist. It is self government as well as democracy. "I understand why it w as not possible at this se.sion to mature legis't!on intended epei'.llv for the d--
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Should one of the family eat something which don't agree with them, or in case of an attack of indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or stomach derangement at daytime or (hiring the night. It is handy to give the quickest, surest relief known. velopment of a system for handling rural, or rather, agricultural credit; but the federal reserve act itself facilitates and enlarges agricultural cerdit in an extraordinary degree. The farmer is as much a partner in the new democracy of credit as the merchant or manufacturer. Indeed, special and very liberal provision is made lor his need, as will speedily appear when the system has been a little while in operation. His assets are as available as any other man's, and for credits of a longer term. Achievements Notable. "There have been many other measures passed of extraordinary importance, for the session has been singularly rich in thoughtful and construetivo legislation; but I have mentioned the chief acts for which this concress will be remembered as very notable, indeed. "I did not mean when I began to write to make this letttr so long, and even to mention the other legislation that is worthy of high praise would extend it to an inordinate length. My purpose in writing was merely to express my own great admiration for the industry and the leadership, as well as the wisdom and constructive skill, which has accomplished all these things. I wish I could speak by name o the many men who have so honorably shared in these distinguished labors. I doubt If there has ever been a liner exhibition of team work or of unhesitating devotion to the fulfillment of party pledges and yet the best of it is that the great measures passed have, shown, I venture to say, no partisan bias, but only a spirit of serious statesmanship. I am proud to have been associated with such men, working1 in such a spirit through ?o many months of unremitted labor at tr'in tasks of counsel. It has been a privilege to have a shore in such labors, I wish I could express to every one of the members who have thus cooperated together my personal appreciation of what he has helped to do. This letter may, I hope, serve in some sort as a substitute for that. Will Konartl Scrvitv. "I look forward with confidence to the elections. The voters of the United .States have never failed to reward real service. They have never failed to sustain a congress and administration that were seeking, as this congress, and I believe this administration have sought to render thern a permanent and disinterested benefit in tho shape of reformed and rectified laws. They know that, extraordinary as the reward is, which I have recited, our task is not done; that a great work of constructive development remains to be accomplished, In building up our merchant marine, for instance, and in the competition of a great program for the conservation of our natural resources and the development of tho water power of the country a program which has at this session already been carried several steps toward consummation. They know, too, that without a congress in close sympathy with the administration a whole scheme of peace and honor and disinterested service to the world, of which they have approved, cannot be brought to its full realization. I would like to go into the district of every member of congress who has sustained and advanced the plans of the party and speak out my advocacy of his claim for reelection. Put, of course, I cannot do that; and with so clear a record no member of congress needs a spokesman. What he has done speaks for itself. If it be a mere question of political fortunes, I believe the immediate future of the party to be as certain as the past is secure. Democrats Unitetl. "The democratic party is new in fact the only instrument ready to the country's hand by wh'eh anything can be accomplished. It is united, ns the republican party is not: it Is stron ? and full of the zest of sober achievement, and has been rendered confident by carrying out a great constructive program, such as no other party has attempted; it is absolutely tree from the entangling alliances which made the republican party, even before its rupture, utterly unserviceable as an instrument of reform: its thought, its ambition, its plans are of the vital present- and the hopeful future. A practical nation is not likely to reject such a team, full of the spirit of public service, and substitute, in the midst of treat tasks, either a party upon which a deep demoralization has fallen or a party which has not crown to the stature that would warrant its assuming the responsible burdens of state. Kvery tn ughtr'ul man sees that a change of parties made Just now would set the clock back, and not forward. I have a verv complete and very confident belief in the practical sagacity of the American people. "With sincere regard-? and admiration. "Faithfully vours. "WOODROW WILSON. "Hon. Oscar I'r.dcrwoud. House of Kepresentatives, Washington. D. C."
SERIES IS ENDED BT THREE TALKS
! Father Conway Tells Large Au dience Why He is a Catholic. Father DeGroote Tells Aims of Lectures. Impressive and felicitous was the occasion of Father IJertrand I. Conway's closing lecture in .South Bend on tho Catholic faith, delivered lost evening in the high school auditorium before an auaience which exceeded any that heard him on any preceding1 evening. The huge theater was filled in both balcony and parquet and many stood in the rear and in the aisles. The closing lecture was an ardent and eloquent summary of the reasons tor Catholic belief, the i s nccific subject being. "Why I Am a Catholic." A large number of representative members of the Knights of Columbus from the South liend and Notre Dame councils, sat on tiie platform. The chairman of the evening was Charles A. Hagerty and before introducing Father Conway with a few appropriate remarks he Kavo place to llev. John F. DeGroote, paster of Kt. Patrick's chuieh, who expressed beautifully his pleasnre at the success of the lecture course and his gratitude to those who made it possible. Father Conway spoke three times Sunday and each time to a large audience. Sunday morning at 10:30 he spoke on tho subject of "Internal Religion" at St. Patrick's church. Every seat in the church was tilled and chairs were placed in the aisles. In the afternoon at 3 o'clock he spoke to Catholic men in the high school auditorium on "The Lay Apostolate." Father Conway left late last night for New York. In his opening remarks Father DeGrooto said: Father DeGroote Speaks. "It gives me great happiness on this occasion to jrreet my friends. Catholic and non-Catholic. I wish this evening to say that the 1G years of my pastorate in South Bend have been the happiest of my life, not alone because of the kindness and cooperation of the people of my own parish but because of the kindness and cordiality of my friends, non-Catholic as well as Catholic. And this occasion this series of lectures by the eminent Father Conway has meant much to me. It has meant to me the opportunity to explain to these non-Catholic friends who have always shown me so much consideration, the faith which I teach. "The lectures have been a magnificent success, much of which we owe to Father Conway. Their purpose has been not to antagonize or to malign anyone who may believe differently from us. Their sole purpose has been educational an effort to place before you all. correctly, the doctrines and practices of our church which have not been understood at all or which have been misunderstood or maligned"In my life I have believed and tried to practice my belief that every
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man is sincere until he has proved himself insincere. That is all I ask cf you who are not of the same faith us I, and who cannot be live as I belie that you look upon me as sincere; that when you hear the teachings of our church maligned you will not believe ill of us; that, in uncertainty, you will come tj us for explanation." Father DeGroote cksed with a tribute to Father Conway and with an expression of thanks to the South Bend and Notre Dame councils of the Ivnights of Columbus and to L. W. McGann, grand knight, for making possible Father Conway's coming, to Catholics and non-Cathc lies and to the press of the city for their cooperation. The delightful musical features of 'the evening wero an orchestral number by Miss Lucille Weber on the harp; Miss Mildred Guilfoyle, violin: Miss Kathleen Guilfoyle, cornet, and Miss Maude Weber at the piano; two splendid vocal numbers by Prof. John Dnirry of Notre Dame university, and another by Miss Josephine Decker of South Bend. Father Conway's closing lecture was in part as follows: "I am a Catholic because the Catholic church guarantees to me, with a divinely infallible certainty, the answer to my soul's most ardent yearning, the union with God through Jesus Christ, God's only son, in a society of God, founded in a love made perfect by the presence of God within me. I am a Catholic because the Catholic church answers a demand of my reason with its certain presentation of the complete reveiation of God and satisfies the aspirations of my soul and will and heart by its perfect Interpretation ; the commands and counsels of the Savior. I am Catholic because the Catholic church gives mo God, complete in His doctrine, law, love and worship. Throe Great lrr)bloins. "Three great problems have worried the minds of men from the beginning. Whence am I? Why am I here? Whither am I jroing? There are the essence of the religious problem. What Is man? What Is God? What is the relation between them? Theso questions demand an authoritative answer. I look around me and see millions of unbelievers, doubting, skeptical and indifferent. Some exalt man to the level of the Most High. Theso are Pantheists. Others lower man to the level of the beast of the field. These are the materialists. Some few declare there is no God. These are atheists. Others declare that He xists, but that no one knows, anything about Him or His plans. These are the agnostics. Some say that He cares naught for the creatures He has made. These are deists. Others say the world is too evil to be the product of a good God. These are pessimists. Some declare that we should worship only the great men of the race and call this the religion of humanity. Christian Scientists declare religion to be only a system of bodily healing. Some say that one religion is as good as another, thus in cowardly manner attempting to free themselves from all religious obligations. These ire indifferentists. A great chorus of denial cries out every day in its despair and its longing. lleasons for Faith. "I am a Catholic because, the Catholic church has always protested strongly against indifVerentism and unbelief and tells me that I am come from Clod and that one day I shall be a free, intelligent being, to an
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swer before the throne of God for every thought, word and deed. I look around and sic million's of Christians uho profess to follow Jesus and they are divided into two great camps, those who deny the divinity ' Jesus and those accept it. I am a Catholic because 1 build my Christianity upon the dogma that Christ J perfect and perfect God in one divine personality; because I accept that Jesus, of his own power, re from the dead. I am a Catholic because I believe no one can profess to know and follow Jesus unless h admit the claim that he is God with the right of the allegiance of every man that comes into the w orld. T deny His divinity deprives of tho r:j;ht to take His name. "I am a Catholic because I do nd build upon a dead hoc I; which can iot ansner when it is questioned; because I reverence the entire Scriptures which my church has safeguarded and interpreted as the word of God. allowing no itne to stay within h r fold who rejected any of the divinely inspired books. I am a Catholic because I know that a sublime and mysterious collection of books does not prove itself, but demands of divine, infallible witness, outside itself, to guarantee its meaning and safeguard the people from every error that human prejudice can reid into the written or printed page. I am a Catholic hocaufe rnv ch n r e h , o v claim of infallibility, is the only church that professes to represent the infallible Jesus, while others logically declare they are but fallible voices that may lead men astray with regard to Christ's doctrine and worship. My church is the one divine society ruled by St. Peter and his successors, the bishops of Rome, appointed by the Christ, to keep His church one in her Infallible witnesses to His gospel. My church is not tossed about by every wind of doctrine, but sails secure and certain toward the eternal promises of God with one same teaching at all times and places. My church has the perpetuation of Christ in the eueharist, the perpetuation of His sacrifice in the mass, the channels of His vivifying blood in the seven channels of His atonement, the sacraments. Not of Modern Origin. "I am a Catholic because my church knows no modern origin in Germany, or Switzerland or America, no modern doctrines like justification by faith alone, no private interpretation of the Bible. She goes on as the first church, with Jesus as the apostles at the time of the Roman occupation eif Palestine, holding to all the old eloctrines preached to the world by Jesus. My church is the mother of countless holy men and women who lived, not lives of goodness and truth as many ilo In the outside churches, but lives of heroic sanctity that are unique in the history of the world. My church knows no evil but sin. no good but the grace of God. insisting strongly at all times upon the one great commandment of the law, 'Thou shalt love the Lord, thy God.' "The essence ef our country's constitution is an ardent love of liberty. When the cry rf liberty and the right not to be taxed without representation rang out from Massachusetts to Virginia, that cry might have died as the utterance of a few enthusiasts if there hail not existed a Washington to concrete it. Although his own men maligned and conspired against him, he led the American forces in triumph with the aid of old Catholic France, entil the final victory at Yoiktown. Useless would have been all the bloodshed if tho government were not
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framed to concrete fr future generations the ide? thMt men did for in 1 7 7 . A bead was d' "ar d. law made, a constitution frn.ed. a :ipreirie court appointed to ! Me nil controversies tbat might arb-. an 1 s i the Fnitd States was firmed. So With Christianity. "So it is with Christianity. Tb b of God a iid the brtbr:i u . th essence of the gosp 1. Tills 'a .us perfect on the God-:nan. Chri-t Js::". who came on earth to teach men how perfectly to be. t. Go 1 and the reth-T'-n for God's sake. After HI death. Christ snv t it thM Mi? gopfl v.-t perpetuated in a li ine. infallible society, with a head written nnd nonwritten in th Bible and tradition, with a supreme court in Rome to settle every controvrrsv about the contest of His teachings. .Men today ar cominc to the old rhuroh for many reasons. Some arc attr.vted by hr painting, some by her architecture. sme by the faet that she is t hn church of the fathers, some by th
Ser.SC O ie unsatis! qion of ti r'.r own church. ne pure soul fr.d her the church of the yi'r.ts. while another wicked soul finds the comfort of h r pardon in the sacrament of 1 enaiK e. one i led by her conservative spirit and another sees in l:r the liberality of Christ which insist op dogmas and Lmvs while leaving hrond scope for individual thinking outside their domain. rv adoilres her for her benefaction?; to the poor. Another loves the saints she has prodrecd by the millions. Some ar" won by the heroic sacrifice of th." missionaries in every age. One rend a book, another speaks to a servant, a third unlearns a calumny, a fourth hears a sermon and God's grace win them by the gentle hading with firmness to the one true fold of th on true shepherd. All become Catholic for the one reason. the Catholic church is God's eiivine society to male them love Him in : His truth and law and worship." RAISES MONSTER BEET The prize sugar beet is believed t" have been raised on the farm of Thomas Beaning southwest of th city. Beaning bronchi in a be t ye--terday that registers the following measurements: L'tl inches lonir, US inches in circumference, weight. pounds. Girlish Complexion Now Easily Acquired A "'.'n ef Mrndd imv. c! i::i ni r e is t V't! V 11 tl li 'I. i 1 1 r r-iti lti t d'-seribes J.er newlv acqulr! nplei.i:. She is el.e who !..is adopted IiaT'-f.ilZe-I wax in p'aeo of '"osim-tii-v, tiroo.ii:'. ini: and ot'.er n.e(hds. M i!.y s !i hn tried tld inurveU'Us wax report tint it eff,-ts arc juit U.T-rMif from tJis of ;uiy other treatment. It piNnluee a eomplexioa -f exquisite girlish i!.-itarah;ess. i.it her thui one bearing evblefire i f having been artificially "made u r." u.e that is indeed "Nature's own." th- r-suit ef gradually absorbing dead part l.-s of surface permitting the younger. kin beTietitli t show its-lf and giving it poreS H ehmee t breathe. Merrnllzed wax. pnoeiirrbh at any drug stop in original one ounce pacUag-". is put o i at idght like cold ciettm and wiis-l.ed -fT in the morning. I have nlsa had iuiny favorable b-ttim from those who hive tried the wrlnkl"reni'tvlr.g face bath which I i eeo in mended recently. If any have n.tslaid the formula. here Hi': 1 oZ. powdered SflXohte. rti-i solved in i2 I't. wit eh hare. -".NatuMe" in the Woman -Militant. Soecials
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