South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 79, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 20 March 1915 — Page 6

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMS.

I

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE MiWS-TIMHS PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS.

vi:sr C.H.i'AX AV. i:tit. .. .l !-,ati' r iit P..t..fh at Suth r.,-i,l, IilIUim smsruiiTi . i:ati:s. .-in-! Nw-wl.n in .m. o. irj , it v. i I ; i i v ami Sun. lay f-r tl wwk bv i"'r V'-ir ii I r.irri-r ,,;'ih ;,'"! h. .t'lvai,..-. I.3 l!..i!l, ! Hally. sinjrle opv m ;" r v,,-'r ! Sunday. ln?lo ropy . n i:ii" : .:.;ir-i in t!... t.-l-j.h'.jM- .Ur--twrv von h:i r-lphm v nr wurt ,;N:,U 'n,!,r" ' Mil "ill mill.-d iift-r Iti hiertioa. Howe J'l.Ml :. 1 J.,1 ; J.,., p.p..,,. -H, 'm:. lm:i:nzi:n woodman " ' , , I"..r.-f!i A'lvtTCNhif: l: pn-yntatlv . . i.l.i Av.-iiii.-. N.-.v York Advertlslr.g IhiUdin;:. Thio.o SOUTH li:M), INDIANA. MAKCII 1'0, lUl.l.

S !; Till; lail.KOADS. Ak'ain we haw it that the railroads, poor things. ar- ,, wiped ut of rxi.-tnce by th- rnkious hand of unsympathetic public, and arc urged to lift a vo;T.' in their behalf kist everything be hurb-d to the "dcnmition how wows." Lift a voice in hehalf of the man who works for a pittance, and li.is ;i hard time keeping jmuI and body to.ther, and you are an anarchist, or at h-asf a demagogue, hut if you wim;!i Ik- reputed tor your conservatism, and b- j.ut down for a man of real wisdom, array yourself on the side of the public-bleeding capitalist, and your future i"1 secure. It I? not alone a matter of standing in well with tb capitalist. They have meet eded in saturating the atmosphere with active friendships quite as persistent in their behalf as they aro in behalf of themselves. In the cunninj of their ways, you even, at times, find those whom they oppress, pleading for them as though It were for some sainted benefactor. Up to a few years ago it occurs to us that the railroads had a pretty good time. They virtually ran the country. Subsidized with large tracts tif land to hctxin with, huge tanks of water were added to the subsidies, and then congress and the various state legislatures were taken over and made to bless them with various sorts of cashable privileges. The people, patrons of the roads, were obliged to pay interest, dividends and protits on this sort of tiling. Then they woke up. As frequently happens when an outraged public wakes up, other things began to happen. The determination to bring the railroads down to earth, and place them on sonic sort of an actual valuation basis, on which The patronizing public should pay toll, may have gotten to pushing the situation rather hard, but it illustrates the principle. Nobody wants to rot) tho railroads but neither do they care to he robbed by them. To our mind- this entire agitation about abuse of railroads, shackling capital, et cetera, is nothing more nor less than a part of a general scheme for the establishment of an era of react ion. The plan is to have it wrought out psychologically; by creating a new condition of the public mind. This is not charging sinister motives against everyone who thinks railroads have been mistreated. The psychological effect may just have reached them. The American people are a fair-minded people. Appeal to their fair-mindedness, and eitiht out of ten of them will be inclined to give up what they believe to be right than take a chance on being unfair. You can create most any condition of public mind that you wan? to by making a scicntitic study of that mind and of the methods by which it can be reached, and mellow, id, and then moulded with thoughts to which It is open. It is still fresh in the Indiana memory, the efforts made by Indiana railroads to get a half-cent increase in railroad passenger rates this year, from the recent legislature. From all the arguments produced, we have seen but one that would excuse such an increase, and that one was to the ef-j feet that the roads hail been terribly abused, and that the magnates would soon have to go to the poor house and turn their automobiles over for junk. It was an argument for sympathy. When it was found probable that their bill would not pass, they finally got at the heart of our big sympathetic governor, and a r lan satisfactory to all was thought to have been discovered throught the agency of the public service commission but thn the "Joker." The railroads were immediately found back at their old tricks, and when the revised bill was finally produced, it was found that there was no end to the increases ihal the commission might make, as long as it limited itself each clip to 27 4oer cent of the existing passenger V4 Mrs. The res-alt was that there wa v - passenger rate legislation. And so we have It that the railroads lave bicn ill-treated again; ill-treat-d. we suppose, because the legislature fused t be Mimhucgcd. It i too ad about the poor railroads being 11-treatcd. but the public! Is the public be dpoliey. thought to lave been on the wane, to again he evived? As we hae before remarkd. it looks to us er- much as though h it were the ourpce of much of the resent agitation, calculated to prearo the pubhe mind for it. and in uch a manmr as to have it really ikeab'e. if ' actually relished, quite fter the fashion of some wives who ove their husbands reore every time hey come ho.r.e drunk and give th m heating. It is true that the railoads ha (i 1 '!! a grt at deal for merian industry, but has American ndu.-'ry done anything for the railon-! s? :ird t It is luueh the same with re-pa--' uer traffic. The railctils hie brought the t. o gr .it ce.uis us 11-nigb to each t thtr's oors. and the d. starve' from the lakt s the '..rough? down to almost dr am. but w:?h ;t has oim- a:: l ( .1 e of t r.i el. v ort h "Hi:: e? hi v g hink the .1 : 1 r la iti;. g w ! ! 1 ! 1 i-:bt to b. e Would 1 v would quit their Indeed, i we all want to see th

railroads get along, but there should be Himc reciprocity. Wo are more

interested in the public getting a I "square deal" than we are in the t railroads getting the "whole smear." POLITICS AS PliAYIin. A strong argument for a non-partisan law applying to state law-making bodies is presented in New Mexico. New Mexico, under territorial rule, was notorious for its political iniquity, (liven statehood, the people, regardless of political alfdlation, and sick unto death of the old regime, elected W. C. McDonald, a democrat, as the lirst governor of the new .state. Hut New Mexico is a republican state and a large majority of the legislature was of that faith. There has been constant friction which culminated in a near riot in the state senate last week. When the time came for the closing of the recent session of the legislature, under the constitutional sixty day limit, the exact hour having Ken determined by the attorney general, by request, the presiding otlicer of the senate, Lieut. Gov. K. t llaca, declared the senate adjourned. But the republican majority of the senate would not have it so. Though that law-making body was in actuality adjourned, they twirled the hands of the clock back, elected a presiding otlicer pro tern, and proceeded to passing laws over the veto of Gov. McDonald. They remained in session a full day beyond the time tlxed by the constitution of the state. Thus another blot is added to the already bespotted escutcheon of New Mexico, and a predicate laid for endless litigation, for which the taxpayer must foot the bills. Party division in national politics has its arguments but there is no stronger reason for drawing party lines in electing legislators to enact state laws than in doing so in selecting councilmen whose duty is to pass city ordinances. Many a measure that would have been highly beneficial to a state has been tlefeated because it originated vith the minority, while much pernicious legislation has gone through, because men conscientiously opposed to it. were whipped into line by the party lash. Carranza has sent a protest to Washington remonstrating at the proposed execution in Oakville. Texas, of a Mexican, Frederick Sanchez, convicted of murder in the first degree by the courts there. Protests are becoming real fashionable and Carranza evidently wants to he in style. Is the jitney bus "getting action Well we guess yes. The city council of Chicago has passed an ordinance requiring the street car company to guarantee to each passenger a scat. The . It. O. sign is to be hidden away under the cushion. In reply to a question from a boy leader, as to whether there is any zoo at Washington, the editor would say that the best known one is located in the capitol building, but it has recently closed pntil the first Monday in December. The Texas legislature has defeated the woman's suffrage bill and thereby caused the world to doubt its vaunted progress. We are willing to give odds that there are people in Texas who still ride in street cars. The bakers in maify places have generously and gracefully yielded to the popular demand by reducing the price of bread again to ive cents per loaf, the loaves being two ounces 1 smaller. From the impatient way in which i those warships in the Dardanelles are acting, it is evident that they are not willing to wait until Thanksgiving before carving Turkey. There is a good deal of talk about one cent postage, but no great demand for it from the people who already have to take a go-cart to the postottlee to carry away circulars with. Those ball games between the university of California and several Japanese colleges will now provide a test of the value of education and culture of the two countries. After sinking an American mer- j chant ship a German cruiser enters an I American port for repairs and sup- j pb.es. It is one of the peculiar hap. penings of war. The states that vote on suffrage next November all have the secret ballot, and yet the wives will all know how their husbands ote. What do you know about that! Some people seem to think it docs no good to pay the grocer's bill promptly, as he would have to use it In settling accounts with the butcher j and baker. I The fact is pointed out that there are several of the 4 s .states that are! booming only a half dozen candidates? for president. A news item says "peace talk" sent ictton up on the New Orleans market.

New Orleans must be an optimistic town all riht.

Carranz.-r.s reply is that if foreigners don't like Mexico City, they ought to get out. The reply seems to be unanswt ruble. A gorgeous new spring hat dazzles all the men except such as cont mplate matrimony. Just think.' All that fuss in Canada, and Thaw didn't escape from ihat asylum! Yarns From Washington By Fred C. Kelly. WASHINGTON. March 20. Shortly after the adjournment of congress, a certain southern senator walked up to Rep. I'inlev of .South Carolina, and .began to bewail the fact that he had not been able to have two more clerks added to his committee at the last moment. "Why do you want more clerks now with congress adjourned?" asked Finley. "They would just draw pay and have nothing to do until next December." "Well, you see," explained the senator, "I was going to use them during the summer as field hands on my farm." This in a letter on Congressman Gordon of Ohio, from a young man who desired some free garden seeds: "If tile government seeds grow as well as those on sale in the stores, I shall be glad speak a kind word for the government among my friends." When cx-Cor.gressman Edward W. Townsend was a budding writer out in San Francisco, he used to seek exercise and recreation at the Olympic Athletic club. He fell in with a young bank clerk who was also taking boxing lessons. Hoth were good boxers, but the bank clerk worked at it more diligently until he began to surpass Townsend. In fact, he gradually acquired such skill that Townsend lost interest in boxing with him. The sport was too wearing on his features. And nobody could blame Townsend for losing interest. Hecause the young bank clerk was James J. Corbett. The worst signature in the next congress belongs to George Holden Tinkham of Boston. When Tinkham writes down his name it not only fails to look like anybody's signature, but falls entirely short of looking like anything else. Imagine a silhouette of the most mussed up ravelling you ever saw and you have only a slight notion of non-committal appearance of Tinkham's handwriting. Congressman James Gallivau of Boston, took the part of buttercup, once upon a time, in an amateur production of Pinafore. He was about 10 years old and was an extremely cute and cunning youngster, particularly after he had heen rigged up in a flaxen wig and doll clothes. .Moreover, he was the hit of the show on the opening night. He was the only player who didn't forget his lines. The stage manager made a great fuss over him. At once little James became proud and strutty and decided to follow the stage as a profession. He could shut his eyes and see a picture and a piece about himself in the New- York Clipper: and the piece began: "He got his start as a theatrical star at an amateur performance in Hoston." He went home and told his parents that after he became famous he would not forget his father and mother hut would see that they got passes to all the shows. At the second performance there was a plight change in the situation. All the players who had forgot their lines the night before, took a brace and did not forget their lines. But little James Gallivan. the hero of tho opening night, forgot the words of his song the first time up. He ran off into the wings, sobbing boisterously and refused to be comforted. They rang down the curtain and the future congressman then and their quit the theatrical profession flat. Tin: vooii:n-m:c.;i:i. Addressing the Kansas editors on the subject. "Wooden Legs," F. 1 Vandegrift said that every man who has a wooden leg has an uncontrollable desire to fraternize with other men who have wooden legs. Once when he was sitting in a park at Iis Vegas four men, strangers to one another, entered. All had woode legs. They got together, and in live minutes were trying on one another's legs. Two of them traded. A man he met had all the battles he had fought painted on his wooden leg. Another painted his wooden leg in deep mourning when his wife died. A friend of his uses his cork leg us a life preserver when bathing: another utilizes his as a propeller. A vain man he met had his wooden leg tattooed. In San Francisco a woodenlegged friend showed Mr. Vandergrift a national magazine published in the interests of wooden legs, called the "Wooden Leg." By means of this publication men all over the world traded wooden legs by paying for want ads in it. Mr. Vandergrift once knew a man who had seven wooden legs, one of them for Sunday. Kansas Citv Star. om; wav out or it. It was getting late and Mr. Dubblcigh's gasoline had given out near a small hotel. "Anybody around here got any gasoline?" he asked the proprietor. "Nobody but me," was the calm reply. "Good." said Mr. Dubbleigh. "Howmuch do you want for it?" "Couldn't sell it to ye today," said the landlord virtuously. "It's Sunday, ye see." "Hut 1 must have some." protested Dubbleigh; "or what am 1 going to do?" "Ye might put up here for the night," said the proprietor, indifferently. "I got a nice room I can let ye have for seven dollars." Ladies' Home Journal. SOMi: I.NI)I.OKl. Tenant Our house is in very bad shape. ne of the walls has bulged out several inches. Landlord Is that so? Then as the houe is larger, I'll have to raise your re nr. HITS OF INFORMATION. An Italian priest who has invented many wireless devices has succeeded in intercepting messages with needles thrust into a potato. Two Knglish words in which all the live owels are to b found in proper alphabetical order are 'abstemious' and "facetious."

HE

ME

COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

Dr. Wiley makes the cxtravasant statement that r cent of human energy K directed toward getting something to eat. Our idea is tliat eating is a mere incident. It is the dollar that alorbs the energy. Oxer: TOO MANY. Flossie Jones could charm a snake As good as any charmer, he bought a rattler, named it Jake, And said it couldn't harm her. Well one fine day the snake and she Were acting n the floor. When Jake he got her on the knee The undertaker came at four. i And papa Jones set out one night, To blast a mighty rock. He had no fear of dynamite, of it he feared no shock. He left the house on Saturday, With fus and stick and pack: They heard the noise five miles away, And he has not come back. Leonora Jones was told and told, Tt go light with kerosene. Her husband used to stand and scold, When her stunts he had seen. She kept, on, a mad desire, The rest is sad to tell. One day she poured some on the fire Her clothes fit his second wife well. William Jones the youngest son, Most every day would skate, And always had the mostest fun. He always got home late. One day when he was doing nice. He stumbled and he slid; h'ome say that it was rubber ice Ma cooks for one less kid. And Mrs. Jones the poor old dear. Liked boiled eggs all too well; She'd eat a dozen without fear, I've heard the neighbors tell. Well once she ate just thirteen flat. Her constitution wouldn't jive; Funny for she was big and fat The trimmings on her coffin were $12.83. WRIGHT ATEM. ON the brink of the vernal equinox we are favored with fair skies and a mild atmosphere, but not so far lulled into forgetf ulness that we do not keep our umbrella handy. The sun is now supposed to be preparing to cross the line, and under the circumstances we do not begrudge it a pleasant trip. SOMEBODY has made the statement that neither education nor training is essential to the success of a movie actor. The statement astonished us, but since hearing Ruth Stonchouses monologue we are convinced. No one can question Miss Stonehouse's success before the camera, but she wouldn't last long before the footlights. The Gardens of Our Souls Each of Us Has the Chance to Cultivate Them. Ily Beatrice I"airfax. If you owned a garden plot of rich, fertile soil would you trust to chance winds to bear seeds to it? Or would you deliberately sow it with tangling weeds, or even dull and unfrarant Howers? "Never!" you cry, and again "Never!" Hut you do own a garden plot of the richest and must fertile soil imaginable a garden plot teeming with sustenance for lovely tlowers and wonderful foliage, gracious in shadow and dappled with sunlight. In your possession is the finest of gardens for planting well chosen seeds. That garden is your own soul. I am not over romantic or rashly idealistic when I tell you that of your own nature you may make a glorious garden. I am just "making a picture for you of a fact. Exactly in the way a wise gardener cultivates his plot freeing it from weeds and training to growth the Mowers and fruit he loves, you may tend the garden of your mind and soul. "Whether you cultivate or neglect your nature it stilJ must produce something. Why not direct the process and intelligently direct it to hoot? The very first thing to do is to go a-weeding. Hoot up useless unkind, envious, discontented. 'inpure and selfish thoughts. They choke the ground in which you might be cultivating wonderful bloom. They tangle their way about th flowers that try to grow up to sunshine and destroy them. Up then the weeds must come. They can't grow if you refuse them ground and sustenance. A jealous thought can't think itself. You have to nourish the weedlike idea that blows Into your mind, or it cannot take root. Don't think wrong thoughts just push them back into the void from which they came. Hoot them out of your garden. The wind of circumstance will blow you where it lists and buffet you about only so long as you think yourself into its power. If you let events blow weeds into your garden and complain about your inability to grow flowers, of course you will have a waste of weeds. If you lot circumstance rugest trains of thought the action to you, and never try- to direct your thinking and doing into useful channels, your lifo must be a waste of weeds, too. Isn't that logical? Kvery seed of thought you allow to fall into your mind and to take root there will produce its natural fruitage. From thistles, thistles come: from wheat, what. It takes no expert in gardening to tell you that. Big. fine, thoughts can neevr produce mean, petty actions. Thoughts that Hie. fine thoughts can never produce actions that are line and big. Everyone understands this in the world of nature. Everyone works along the line of this knowledge. The puzzle is how can anyone fail to apply it to the world of his own mentality as well? Good thoughts bar good fruit. The crop you harvest from evil thoughts cannot but be evil. The proof of this lies in your own nature. It is from his crop of one year that the gardener learns wisdom to cultivate more wisely a better harvest of fruit and tlowers f'T the next y-af. Now if you will just weed the evil out of your mind and set about cultivating one set of tine ideas and ideals, you will he astonished and delighted to observe the transformation this will bring about in vour life. The way of it is this: Thought develops naturally into action: action repeated a few times grows to habit. Habit molds circumstance. Suppose you begin to think work

LTING POT

TwonUrth Century Gratitude, (.'outh Hend's Greatest Newspaper.) OA RY, Ind.. March IS. John Anderson risked his life and was injured Thursday when he drove a motor delivery wagon over .1 sidewalk and intc a vacant lot to aold hitting several children playing in the street. While Anderson was pinned underneath the overturned car, the children robbed i. of the groceries it contained. "IT was an inferno," vaid an officer describing Neuve Chapelle. Which is another way of saying what Sherman called war. TERRY HUT gets only cue column on th3 frcnt page, but it holds its own with the other six columns of war news. How Alxuit It, Hro. lYcodom? (Cor. Hurr Oak Acorn.) We notice that Bro. Freedom strained his arm at a big meal, north of Burr Oak, some time ago, making it difficult to write the news. Also speaks about Clate breaking the rec01 d by refusing his piece of pie. We wonder, indeed, and we feel quite inclined to believe, whether his honor did not strain his arm trying to get date's piece of pie away from him. IT is the observation of business men that on days when they have all the work they can do they usually have to do more than they can do. In other words, work is cumulative. If one thing sees a lot of things going in a certain direction it joins the bunch, drawn, perhaps, by a sort of gregarious instinct. The Hani Hearted Editor. It makes me feel so verr sad That we should bo denied The benefits of "AtemV ode. Yet justice doth abide. To C. N. F. we send the goods. He sorts and sifts the same. His readers he must try anl please Or his will be the blame. Yet we must humbly beg for Wright, That wrong may not be done. For fun and laughter brighten more Than aught beneath the sun. Let 'Atom's" sins be what they may. Direct or otherwise. May blessings fall on Atem Wright From out the sunny skies. Our spirits leap to meet his wit And humbly we today Tender an offering of thanks In this small roundelay. L. B. N. ABOUT the hardest job a congressman has is to satisfy his seed cus tomers. C. N. F. 1 (whatever it is) congenial. You do it half-heartedlv. Presently you become lazy shirker. And you too likely to grow into one of life's miserable failures. Failure you need never have been if success had been in your thought. You had only to think of growth and industry and advancement to win them some time. If your actual, physical warden to one geranium in a pot or a farm or acres you apply to it the best of care 1 sunlight, fresh air. the weeding out of useless growths and careful nurture of blossoms. Is your own nature any less important than a geranium in a pot, or a glas.s-covercd greenhouse'. TWENTY YEARS AGO Reminders From the Columns of The Dally Unveil. Augustus Greene, 17, son of John K. Greene- of Warren township, was crushed to death by a sawlog. Alex. .Staples began the erection of a brick building at Calamity Corners. A Xiles man published a column article to show that the .t. Joseph river might be made navigible with a system of locks. Mrs. Klizabeth Zeitler Kockstroh, widow of Casper Roekstroh, died, aged 6 2. Mrs. Elizabeth Fassnacht, mother of Chris Fassnacht, died, aged So. Ground is being staked off for J. D. Oliver's new residence. V JL k V V f Jf (s. BITS OF INFORMATION si mtm V V JL 7 4 JT V V " - "Tuthcr day," related old Dad King, the Oklahoma cattle baron. "I was rumbling along in a street er r when a batch of young fellers got aboard. I judged they were college students by their funny clothes and queer shaped heads. The car was pretty full, and they pushed and snorted back and forth injthe aisle, tromping 0:1 people's feet and committing similar frivolities that-a-way. Bime-by they all r'ared back and fetched loose a long yell. Then the nearest one to me took a look, and not admiring my face, or something, says: 'Well, nv rural friend, don't you like it?' 'Shore, I like it! savs I, 'I'm half-witted myself!' " When a thief drove out of the town of iSilvrrficld, New, with a team of horses oelonging to Curley Jones, a miner owner, he took with him the only conveyance in the town. As a result Jones was compelled to walk P.o miles over mountain and desert to notify th- sheriff. Firing at its highest speed, a French battery would take 1.'! minutes to hover every square yard within ranee. Estimated that 0:1 per cent of the ocean door is devoid of vegetation. NOT OF AN INQUIRING TURN. A Judge dined recently at a hotel, where the man who takes car' of the hats is celebrated for his memory about the ownership of headgear. "How do you know that is my hat?" the judge asked. I don't know it. sir," said the man. "Then why do you give it to me?" "Because you gave it to me. sir," replied the man. without moving a muscle of his face. Tit-Bits. rou .rn;An.Nci; s.ki; ! One day Pat appeared on rhe street J with a liupc tear in his coat sleeve. j "Iiok here. Tat," protested a j friend, "why don't yoirpet that hole) mended?" j "Not Oi. sor," said Tat; "a hole may j be the result of an accident, hut a patch is a sure sit'ii of poverty. Indies Home Journal. i:X SANATION. Path or. why do the Chinese helieve in ancestor worship? I presume, my son. because they have no family photograph t.lbums. 1 Tuck.

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Modern houses are more in demand every day by families renting, and they find that houses which are equipped for electric service of a better class than those without Often times they will see a porch light that will induce them to look over the place, that otherwise might be passed by. A house may have bath and furnace, unless it has electric lights it is not modern. Our wiring proposition makes it possible to place your house in the modern class. Call New Business Department. Indiana 8c Michigan Electric Co. 220-222 WEST COLFAX AV. Bell 462. Home 5462.

OR. THE JlfoV UK' One of the new clever little models which we are showing in Spring Novelty Suits is a Black and White check, with white P. K. vest, straight pants; ages 4 to 8 vears. Price Bovs' and Children's new Spring Cloth Hats, 50c to $1.50. piro s HARRY L.YERRICK Funeral Hoirif Director Try NEWS-TIMES WANT ADS

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