South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 103, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 13 April 1915 — Page 6

TTI-SDAY, Al'KlIj 13, 1'JIS.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS- I1MES

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

210 WEST Entered ti iecorcd clari matter at the

SUBSCRIPTION RATFS.

Dally and Pnnday la 4dranc, In city. jr '.oo Dat!j and ficnday in ndrance, by mail, per ye.r ?..00

If your namf appears in the telcrhone directory you ran telephone ycur want "ad o The Nm-Ttir4eM r.fSce and a bill will Le mailed after lta insertion. Honw phone 1111; Iieil phone ?U0 CONE. LORENZKX A; WOODMAN Foreign Advertilng Representative. 5 Ptfth Arenne. New York Adrertlilng BuiMla. CMcaro

somi hi:m), Indiana, apiul 13, 1915.

TIMi: TO DISCIPLIM; Till: HI'S- 1 HAND KILJillKS. Sunday must have been a bad day In South Pond and Mishavvaka for the mental balance of women. Here a husband stays away late to a dance, after entreaties from his wife to return home, and is finally shot by her for his stubborness. Another is found at home with a paramour when her husband returns, and she tries to kill her husband, but the Run balks. At Mlshawaka a husband comes home late, finds his wife in what is to him the unwelcome company of another woman and two men, and in response to his objections, sh shoots him. The execsrs for the.v shooting, accordingly, were not all-one-sided. Fatan appears to have been rampant for three female ouls, rr.ayhap. counting upon the lectric cnair at Michigan City for such immediate dispatch as the "law's delays. ' executive clemency, or as k turns out, ineffective aim, might not be able to prevent. As It appears on the face of it, there can be no excuse for the Mishawaka woman whatever. Same with the second of the local women. They were prettv nearly all wrong. Ah to the other South Pend case we are not so positive about it. "Women have some claim upon their husbands as well as husbands have upon their wives. The dance hall is not the best place in the world for a man who has a wife and 10-month-old baby at home, this regardless of the testimony which goes to indicate that had he been at home, hbi roughness might not have been consistent with the proper conduct of a kind and Indulgent husband and father. Neither is a home, with a 1Cyeur old daughter present, and tho husband away at work, exactly the proper place for a wife to entertain gentlemen company- to a beer party accompaniment. One bed-mate is all the law allows to any woman not a Mormon. The chords cT domestic infelicity appears to have been drawn pretty tight in all three oases, but not enough in any. we believe, to quite justify a resort to gunnery. In fact, murder is seldom, if ever, a proper remedy for such ills, whether executed by the wife or husband, or anybody else. A little of tho WillardJohnson science is sometimes excusable, but when it comes to taking human life that is a very different matter. We seek to render it pardonable sometimes on the theory of exaggerated impulsiveness or temporary insanity "dementia Americana" or "brain storm" as they called it in the Thaw case, but too much, consideration of that nature would be to convert murder into a "free lance." The problem always has been Just how far society should go in disciplining those who surrender discretion and proper control of their minds. One thing is certain, tha t should always go far enough, if possible, to make reckless people u tritie more thoughtful. Whether the recent acquittal of tho Klver Park woman, accused of husband killing, was any encouragement to thesfj women, we are not prepared to state. The acquittal was the verdict of the jury and therefore legally justified. One should not expect to acquire freedom from an offense actually committed because someone accused, had upon trial been pronounced innocent. A guilty person might not, and indeed, the presumption is that they probably would not. win such a verdict. There is a self-consciousness back of all this that a person indulging in murderous performances cannot well esrapo. Our state prisons should be mind hospitals instead of penitentiaries but this dors not say that people who have demonstrated that they are suffering from a mini disease,! are deserving of any such sympathy as would exempt them from treatment. The prosecutor's offices should take these cases vigorously in hand. The evident intent to kill, or at least the impulse, should at least hae disciplinary confederation, and that for a sufficient term that others may chance to think twice before they eonelude to strike the same trail. Gov. Palston in a public statement a year ago served warning on the men of Indiana that no wlfe-iaurdt rer need expect executive clemency at his hands; this perhaps not without justice, but women ought not be encouraged by it, into thinking that they may have clemency uniimiteu. it is nusoami-muruer, t 0j rather than wife-murder, which uf late years, has led in the proportion of increase. Rolling-pins. Hat-irons, and dishes, the feminine weapons of ld, aro giving away all too frequently to poison and bullets, and the di:ticultles that beset convictions are becoming quite too numerous for mainline safety. The time seems fast approaching when society must kic more attention to the "dementia Americana" and "brain brm.V women. TllO-i. HO W ALU. It Is gen"rall i.el.ewd rial rv..i. rHJtomol,ilts will i-e 1 t i;- . .:.-.m than ever before. Many people fc I

COLFAX AV.

Postoffice at South Bend, Indiana I)aily nnd Sunday carrifr for the ek by 11 Ptllj. ilnjrlf copy -.c Sunday, lng!e copy 3c not to own a machine. Yet there arc tens of millions of good people in this country who own no automobiles. Have they wholly failed in life? There are of course many people i perfectly able to buy motorcars, who ; do not care for them. The meditative paces of the old family horses suit t hem better. Or they may have no gumption for machinery. The possibility of finding themselves stranded on a lonely road twenty-live mihs from nowhere is deterrent. Still automobiles are the twentieth century's most popular toy. In nine out 02' ten cases, failure to own one results from a feeling of inability to afford it. What solace have these people for lack of a convenience that a great many people now find to be an absolute necessity? To the philosopher, the possession of two good muscular Kgs. able to walk considerable distances without fatigue, is a very good substitute. It 1 is a compensation which many pcoplt do not understand. Kven before the clays of automobiles, one often used to hear farm people, who had the use of several horses, speak rather contemptuously of city persons who used to come into the country and spend a good ileal of time walking. It never leerned to occur to the horse owner that people walk for the mere pleasure of the stride and the close contact with nature. The use of motor cars is weakening muscular power lor a great many person. As the fascinating ease of motion gets its grip over them, it is a great temptation to jump into them for a half mile shopping trip or errand about town. .Man is a walking animal. Ilia organs depend for their stimulus on muscular .activity. The results of losing the habit of walking, under tho beguilements of a fascinating plaything, seem ominous. They are something that threatens serious work for the doctors. SIGNS OF PFACF, SOMLJriMi:. At Lloyd's exchange, Ixmdon, they're betting odds that the war will not last a year longer. Heats on New York stock exchange are selling at record-breaking prices. These things show that the big gamblers arc getting ready to gamble with opportunities unprecedented. The war gives the international deck of cards a thorough shuffling, and the world is going to sit into the game, with the limit rising through the roof. Other things being equal, the fellow who has the most money and can best stand losses, wins. AND SAM WILL HI-: TIIKKK. Experts estimate that the outlay for the war is now at the rate of two billion dollars per month, another year of it to cost 25 billions. A government can print money, or its equivalent, in unlimited quantity but there comes a time when such money loses its purchasing power. "What then? Bankruptcy, or confiscation of private properly for government use. In such a crisis, any party meaning mostly the United States having a lot of perfectly good money becomes the high cockalorum of finance, world finance, at that. A Missouri paper offers a prize of $1.85 for some plan for utilizing the little black studs that laundrymen put; into the collar button holes of shirts. It would seem more desirable to give the prize to some manufacturer who would be content to put shirts on the market without 15 pins stuck all over them. Now Germany has plunged headlong into destruction. Press d'spatches report that the natives of the Canary islands are bitter because of the sinking of the Falaba and Auila laden with supplies for the Islanders. They may declare war, and good bye. J kaiser. Philip Brown, professor of international law at Princeton, announces that "it is a sin to call war a horror." Wonder what U is to call war all we want to call it, but don't dare to be- j cause wifey feels it would be awful to j have the children hear it. Ex-Pres't Guiterrez and his follow-j ers are ginc over to Villa. So is Iluerta, it is reported. Haven't they got any anti-trust laws in Mexico that can bust up this unlawful combination c x-presidents There are some people who will l persist in cleaning tip mo ironi aru j in spite of the fact that the dogs of I the llcighboi hood ate v-ire to deposit j about a doen Imius t!ire vvimin the ! next few da s. The reat popularity "f .iitue mum s may be explained by the faet thai thev oftfn take a man to hi front door. o that lie avoids firing himself jo.t b havirg V 'v.'lk handnd i a ! u . : . : ; '" ! l 1 Tip- military goose. tep :s i : ral l ridiculed and i a'.mot as a' is ud as the iutlls that gcH ou. in

the bi?r city The kaiser bounces Giffnrd Pinchot from Pelgium because his sister is wife of a Pritish diplomat. It's a blamed stent bettor reason for bouncing Clifford than Taft had, too. Explanations of why and how Willard whipped Johnson are still in order. We weren't there, but our guess is that Jess kicked Jack on the shins when the referee wasn't looking. A Houston undertaker has purchased a pulmotor to use in brin'-ing the dead to life. Gee! Houston must have some awful poor business men. The circusesire on the road again, but they will never be as popular as formerly until more of the animala are again fakes. Many fashionable girls are carrying canes this spring, but none have yet been seen smoking pipes. Seeing America First 15 jr Fred Kelly. Prom Diary: I would not have had the heart to write in my diary today except for one thing. i saw in the papers yesterday that a Washington young woman has recovered the $:,000 cigaret case she left in her wheel chair at Palm Peach. If she had not recovered that $:.000 cigarct case it would have spoiled the entire spring and summer for me. 1 reckon I would have cried myself to sleep every night for a month. That she can smoke once again from, the J .1,000 gem-studded case is the best news 1 have heard since I read a while ago that a fancier had finally developed a perfect cat. Xow, if I could just get some positive assurance that Mabel Gilman Corey will never write any more magazine articles and that Eleanor Sears will soon be back safe anil sound on the first page I believe 1 could go to work with a light heart. The San Diego exposition must be the best exposition, considering tho size of the town in which it is located, that has ever been put on. San Diego was a town of only 4 0,000 when their fair was started five years ago. Now they claim 100,000. That may be a tritie high, but anyway the town has enjoyed a big boom. And it should. Any town of 4 0,0 00 population, containing people that have the nerve to undertake a show like that at San Diego ought to have anything it wants. I am not going to do much describing of expositions, for that has been done rather exhaustively in folders and booklets that may'be had for tho asking, but the San Diego fair is characterized by a clean-cut exquisiteness that makes it a cameo of expositions. It must be borne in mind that it is primarily a horticultural fair, showingVthe products of southern California. Hence the out-of-doors part, with its flowers and landscape effects, is just as important as the inside. Tho San Diego fair is worth going to see, even if one didn't go inside a building. The most noteworthy exhibit at San Diego, to my mind, is the five-acre model farm, with its model bungalow and model gardener's cottage. It has at least one sample of every kind of fruit, flower, vegetable or shrub that will grow in southern California, and nothing on it was planted more than : two years ago. After the fair is over, j the city of San Diego plans to keep the model farm for a permanent exhibit. ' It should be kept up, not by the city but. by the state, for it will bring scores of people to California. I cannot imagine any one of human impulses looking at the model farm without feeling a desire to live in California on a live-acre farm somewhat similar. San Diego claims to have a climate that shows less variation in the course of the entire year than any place in the ITnited States or any place in the world. I forget now which. Anyway, they insist that it is a great climate warmer in winter and cooler in summer than any place else you can think of. If you are too hot. just move across the street into the shade, and all is lovely. If you are a trille cool reverse the process. I tried the scheme to see if it would work, and it did. Then San Diego has other attractions, it is on a beautiful bay, within sight of snow capped mountains, and its people are real genuine folks. If I were picking a town for the offhand hospitality of its people people that I would like to have for neighbors I believe I would select San Diego. Down in the Imperial valley, a stretch of fertile irrigated country south of San Diego, overlapping into old Mexico, they take a peculiar attitude toward the weather. They have less than one inch of rainfall a year and everybody is mad because they have that much. The people there look at it this way: "We can't hope to get enough rain to do anything any good. We must depend entirely on water from the Colorado river for our crops. So why have rain at all? Everything here is arranged on a no rainfall basis. An hour of rain musses everything up. Better have not a drop of rain." The (day Noil is the kind that we build adobe houses of, and when it gets wet it sticks to one's fret worse than any clay you ever saw. If a man keeps chickens and they walk about the vara after a rain the clav ii:ls o be amputated from their feet by hand. Is it any wonder they are .opposed to rain? Imagine having to j

?tore clothes parade on avenues Kastcr Sunday.

out and spend a day picking clavl1"5"" a"0"1 ' n 1 a7cip"; 1 J":,1"" ,1 the feet of a lot of silly-looking "nd,NeW .rk' 7ra? la T :kens. I would rather make my n he south In the yst, a heav

from chick living tyinir string in almanacs. HITS OF INFORMATION. liussia has .".000.000 horses, the United States has 24.000. 000, and the world contains 1 00. 000. 000. Excluding Ala ka. the whole of the ! United States could be put into Brazil, and there would still be 200. eOu square miles uncovered. Before the war Germany averaged one practieinc physician for ach 2.V00 inh.ibltai'-s. whereas it is s.iid that China a'.'t.ut I'.'T.mo o nil llio.eeil physician inhabitants. lor ! j i MRA Tl.GY. was thrown quite oil" his ( diath :rd vviien ail stipulate! or a aiu:- ;u ";n ciniury s.yie a h. rv v. . IP" absented th PI.iltin , vv uli a :.( ( r of disdain. So tb.c' v. forth and beari tl lie he.-. ,y tj;,. t;i)U- i;..,! had s.ii'.U himself to his kucc.-s Pa was oat of -i;ht. "David wins!" cried the miltt i iitics, ununimou!v. Puck to th , id i y

I THE MELTING POT I COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

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Courtesy omcrs a 111111(1(11(10 of discrepancies. April U politely scheduled as a spring month. DIPPY DITTIES. L A lYieml In Need Is n Friend Indeed. Nellie wus Irish an Susie wus Dutch, Hut that didn't matter so very much, For Nellie wus pore an' Sue wus th same. An' true friends they were in hart an' in name. Nellie wus prutty an' Susie wus too, Nellie had brown eyes an' Susie had blue. An both of thim worked in a little shop, Asslstin th' growth of th garment crop. But wan day th' Boss bawled pore Nellie out, Just for doin wrong what she wus about, Nellie flared up an biffed him a crash, Which to say the least wus a littlo rash. This Miss Susie got into the scrap. And th Boss wus slightly mussed in th map, An' wan eye wus black an' wan ear wus blue, E'er th' cops arrested pore Nellie an' Sue. Both were yanked up in th county high court Helped th' lawyers deny an retort, dimmed th' jury file in sad an' slow, An heard th judge tell 'em where they must go. Nellie is Irish an Hut it doesn't much. Susie is Dutch, help them so very For Susie got five an Nellie got ten, An' Us livin they both are now in th pen. II. M. II. IN a moment of aberration we printed the second of 11. M. H.'s "Dippy Ditties" first. We are confident tho explanation will be satisfactory to U. M. H., and the public will not caradam. IF there were a prospect of crips continuing to limp into our harbors we might view with alarm the possibility of our ports becoming clogged with interned warships. But, German vessels are the only ones that can get in easier than they can get out, and they say these two now in shelter are the last of the rovers of that nationality in western Atlantic waters. So, we need not worry. This is the if-but-so or tne interning situation. Those Good Old Days When We Took :vjunch to tho Game and Stayed All Day. (Cor. Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette.) A great time was had at Green Center yesterday at the closing of that school. The Green Center and Huckleberry school had a ball game. The score was 33 to 17 in favor of Green Center. THE locksmith has had a busy time. Thus far he has evolved the Hillock Padlock Deadlock Mulock Springlock Canal lack Gunlock Hullock Lovelock Hemlock Wheelock Oarlock Pinlock Toelock Hammerlock and there may be some more.

SIGNS OF PROSPERITY

Kansas state banks show deposits increased $22,000,000 within a year and national banks nearly as much more. Nebraska, Minnesota and Iowa bank reports tell the same story of prosperity. The prosperity of the farmer spells prosperity for all the rest of us. Press, Corning, la., April : ioi5. Work at the Wilshire Bishop Creek mine resumed this week when men went up to shovel out the snow drifts preparatory to breaking the road through to camp. E. W. Walter, general superintendent, arrived lat Monday to direct the work, and Gaylord Wilshire, president of the company, who has been away for some time on business connected with the enterprise is expected back next week. Work of unvvatering the mine and getting the stopes ready will begin very soon and the mill which was completed before operations were suspended last fall, will be started as soon as this work is completed. There is about two feet of snow about camp at present, but the recent warm weather is taking it off very fast. Heruld, Rishop, Colo., March 26, 11)13. Seherer, Slato & Patterson, the Jefferson City Cut .Stone Co. reports prospects line for building here with plenty of work In sight. This firm has the contract ror the cut stone at the prison by the last assembly to complete the building. Tribune, Jefferson, Mo., March 31, l&K'. DETROIT, Mich., April o. Detroit automobile manufacturers are operating on a larger scale than they had expected at this time. In some cases factories are working day and night. The motor truck factories are still receiving war orders. The most encouranging thing the motor car manufacturers have encountered is the improvement in trade in the cast. The large orders from that section show that conditions are jrreatly improved there. This is particularly true of the district about Philadelphia. Boston trade is expected owing to the high prices of trrain. Dispatch, Krie, I'a., April 4, l'Jl,". The United .States Steel Co. has more unfilled orders on hand now than at any previous time lor a year. The farm'-rs of America nave pocketed the record prices of a decade for everything but cotton and apples. Every shipyard in the land is workins: overtime trying to get out orders. The New Republic atnrms that one snipbuuumg concern aione na euoumi eontracts to keep 6.000 men busy lor n arly three years. With these facts in mind, will someone piease ri.se ;mi tell tne excuse iui keping up talk about "depression" ;:nd hard limes? There isn"t any excuse. Granting the waste and destruction of war. granting the unequal impact of high pruts, granting all the deductions that n,u.-: be made from what conditions w..abl be if tlie death of an aichd.lk? bail not been made the pretext for world strife, tin- fact remains that

shouli have The ConvMxmilence School Reporter. (Sample Submitted.) At about 11:30 Ccrcoran while on his beat noticed an open window in the rear of Frazer HLDG. slowly going t) the scene Corcoran saw some one inside but before Corcoran had any chance to do anything the burglar leaped out and attacked the patrolmen with his gun shooting him twice. The noise of the shots came to attention of Officer Patcrson who came in time to see the Bandit ascaping afetr a brief run the burglar was captured and brouth to police headquarters. THEHK are two serious periods of life, one In childhood and on-2 in old age. In one the mind is striving to grasp the meaning of things and in the other to analyze it. WE could have no objection to Fort Wayne building a lateral out to the Dixie road, but why compel the innocent traveler to go out of his way to get to South Hend. Discriminating Against Jack Itabbits. (Tucumcart, N. M., Sun.) Delinquent subscribers aro hereby notified that jack rabbits will no longer be accepted in payment on back subscription at this office. We've already received so many of the critters that our children's ears are beginning to grow long and pointed as a result of eating too many of them. Until further notice, however, coyote, bobcat, skunk and mountain lien pelts, Mexican frijoles and baled bear grass will bo accepted on subscription at their market value. Venison in season same as cash. Govern yourselves accordingly. WE don't like to mention names, but why don't some of our asphalt burners move to Hazine, Kan., where they hang out this sign? KAZIXE. Speed Limit 100 Miles An Hour. DO YOUR I JAUNTIEST. SO much of the time of the patients in the sanitariums is spent in bed and in the bathtubs that they may be said to be obeying old Rill Shakespeare's Instructions to "get up to play and go to bed to work." H. S. F. INFORMATION wanted; which is the better (or butter) reason for naming Mary's Coat? Marv had a little goat. She called it Oleo, Because it always ranked so high In a butter show. Or Mary had a little goat It would stamp and stutter he called it Oleo because It was such a little butter. HOS. THERE are times when it behooves the recreant to put on the armor of righteousness. IT is unfortunate for the profession that the second-story and t asement men have discovered that editors harbor diamonds and other bric-a-brac of that character on their premises. Now none of us will be safe. OF course profession. we mean the editorial OUR diamonds go into hock today. C. N. F. America has a solid basis and a very good superstructure of prosperity. The tariff grafters who think to get back their ancient privileges by winning over hard times might as well stop their dolorous chorus and g t to work. This country is going forward, not back, and AlCrlcnlsm already belongs to ancient history. Be cheerful and get busy. Mail, Hughcsville. Pa., April l, 1915. A director of the Wcstlnshouse Electric Co. stated that there had been an improvement in business the past two weeks, and that the outlook was favorable to further increase. It was also reported that the Union .Switch fc Signal Co.'s business is improving. Standard, Irwin, Pa., April 2, 1915. The Dover Pearl Button Co. resumed operations last Thursday at noon to till some orders just received. It is hoped that before the present orders are filled other orders will be in to keep "the wheels, rolling" continuously. News, Dover, Ky., April 1, All sheet and tin mills in the Mahoning Valley, employing over ,1,000 men in all, resumed work Monday, following unofficial announcement that Amalgamated Associated locges had voted in favor or accepting the proposed wage reduction asked fcy m: r.u facturers. With one excep.ior., the mills at Youngstown and at 2,'ilcs and Warren had been idle from, five to eight weeks because of the wage deadlock. The vote in this valley was heavily in favor of the reduction, and overcome the adverse vote in the Wheeling district. Sentinel, Farrell, Pa., April 1. 1113. TWENTY YEARS AGO Hemlndere From the Columns of The Dally Tliueo. The Interstate Power comr.any asked for a franchise. ! Sam Adler is in Chicago today. j Mrs. K. I). Shencfield returned to Milwaukee today. ' Andrew Anderson is in Richmond taking depositions in an important i case. ! Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Garsuch are moving to their suburban home near the Muessel brewery. i Mr. rnd Mrs. Clem Studebaker went j to Indianapolis to attend a meeting : of the trustees of DePauw university. : Mrs. John Gallagher and Mrs. T. P. j Morelook have issued invitations for j Wcdncsdav. April 1M. from 4 to i o'clock. riNDING HIM on. Do vou recollect that once when ! we had a quarrel 1 said you ,vcre just as mean as you could ie . Yes. my dear. Uh, Tom. how little did I l now vou then'

.STUANGK that we overlooked wedlock.

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