South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 169, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 18 June 1915 — Page 6
Fnin.w, Jixi; is, 1115.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS. :i0 WEST COLKAX AV. Entered aa etor.J rl.i nialtrr at tte I'os-toffice M South Venl, In3'sna
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th Gorman public, as it is Just now l.rcinninij to be, we should have no trouble in coming to a satisfactory understanding".
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jitm-:ys m mki:i:t cih as i:iilati; I'kohllms. Very naturally th a nt i-j it n y uitat.r or aitatorn fur jiti.'-y regulation. haw- ev cut i:aliy r a hd the pint whf.ro tv cy want th- j:tn y 1 r l -coition anl the .-tit i.iilv.iy j-rb-Ic;n separated. Major Ki-li r is ac-cu.-ed cf doubting the i rinan r:cy of tho jitney bus and .f uu-n ly employ. lnur it as a temporary ( dient to cluh onjothin out ..f the .street railway people, in xj,.-lV of the fact that the anti-jitruy ji pita l i for it is regulation that would put the j:tncj out cf tiii'-im -.s that the regulation proponent. really want, are so elo.sely allil vsith the 3 t r t railwaj eompany. afraid that th- jita'y.s will become a permanent proposition, we do not u.,nder that'thf j- shouhl want the problems sepai atcd. We note, honepr, that in cery opposing word, uro'in municipal control of this new brand of transportation. defense of th :rret railways is ahvavs lin'i rins somewhere just around the corner. Not-- thi.; from our Main M. contemporary: If Mayor Killer really has the interests of the city at heart, if ho i.s ron- f i ned w ith pl ot e. tiir-; future Kenerations as well as the res-!!t public, he oimht to spend foin time studin-r the jitne as an onomir factor in tlie community which in some form hids fair to hfome a fixture in municipal society. For that 1 asoti we ur-o in lahalf f tho tiroi'iit Koneral put'.ie that Mr. Krlhr and the council take up .eme form of regulation and not to rfop there, but to continue to study the problem to meet and handle it with enlightenment as zeal. And In this we are agreed. Mayor Killer and the council should "spend isom- time studying the jitney as an economic factor" that eventually it may he able to jnect the problem "and handle it with enlightenment as well ;.s zeal." That is exactly what Hiram John-on, governor of California, told th- street railway magnates of that state, when they presented him with a bill passed by the legislature, to regulate jitneys off the map. Head it: The jitney bus is something new and und"-adopeil to any sin h extent as admits of intelligent regulation. Th- problem meas to be studied. I shall nt'iis" to fUKii anj" s'.ich law, or any law dealiiu with jitney buse.s otherwise, than as automobiles, until their status has been more clearly ascertained, and tluir value to the community is more definitely established. A bill was introduced in the 1 0 1 ." leirislat lire of Indiana to put jitney buses under the public service commission undoubtedly the product of the Indianapolis street railway people. TP" senate killetl it for the ety satno reason that the California governor vetoed sucA a law. Sou. Harmon pleaded lont: and pathetically against the jitnej" bus. He had all tho people in Indianapolis .j u.n oer and killed, so anxious was ho for tho "public safety." The offense that he took at beim: questioned as to whether the Indianapolis street railway company was baclv of his bill, was quite' sad. thowuii h- did admit something in defense of th;- strut ruilvas that they represent larue instments that stiould In- ! Otected. etc. And what our contemporary succrt is eac!l what Mam- Keller i doin stud in;; th- problem. The common council, we also understand, is to stud' the pro! bm. Ami when it is figured out, the sort of regulation that the city ne-d. we pause to hope that we will u-t regulation, n-t of the hurried destine the sort tnat street railway ie.a?:nati want, but of the construe ti e. savin.: sort that will ennure to th.e bent fa of the people of South 1'end. We hop- that the city of ;"ouih Kend will Ur.ow f.ett r th.an ever acain to grant a perpetual or .. h:sia- tianShist to any public utilitv. or iud;i!o in any regulations likel To t '.eate men polics. or pr serve them.
MIL 1 1 A 1 1 N i:lL.IN. George Hahn. estimator and superintendent of tiie Hil'berd Printing Co.. in which John A. Hihbord. member of Tlie boai 1 of safety. i interested. ind prantee of the city contract, for l ie printing of tlie tit- ordinanco lo.v and biildn; ci'de. ::I.s an exception, and apparently right!-, to tho inference that he may be a "durnniv"" for his emplover? He sas: This aeeoij!U is m' pelsoi.,l arf.iir. I have ,.id an account for personal work d-'Ue, not only ! v the Mlhherd shop but by otlnr print .--hops in the ity. f.r over n ir. It i- tr'o t'oat I am enipbvtd by the llibberd e-.unpanv as tstimator and supen.iti niei.t but th'it does not !a elude !Ue from making a little money on The side. The HlM erds c.;ild V."l f'.o a! I t!if work on this job if they war.tt ! to They could not t-f. the tpe Whatever they lli.iV d". it anything, will be merely Li cause th v !:.ve utnler' id oth-q-;r:nTrs. It is mv- own personal orm .et atl !' !'hrr the Hihbcrd company 1. or Mr. Hihbcrd knew anvthii.-; aio;t bidding for it or gtt.r.g :: until tb.e report of it appear, d in tb.e r. ( v spapi r:.
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the Hibhcrtl shop mad- it look as thou-h he mi'ht have been employed as a "stool-p.treon" to evade that technicality. We merely asked for an explanation. It appears above. I Sesides, , we have it from the nmo source that the Hibberd plant occasionally does work for other print shops, some of which was taken by those other plants from the cit', only to rind it necessary to sublet the work. They might a.s well bo regarded as a "dummy" for the Hibberd company as might Mr. Hahn, perhaps, onlj" they are not otherwise an employe. If Mr. Hahn is really in business for himself aside from his job as estimator and superintendent fer tho Hibberd plant, and conducts his business as above outlined, we can see no reason why the contract is not just as legitimately made, as though it were with someone else. And Mr. Hahn is reputed to he a man of ids word; a man who can he depended upon. Besides he is a good democrat and we sort of wanted to know if he had fallen from grace. He has given us to understand. AUK SONS WOIMII Mom' THAN i) r;ii Tt:its? New Jersey is one of the states whb h will vote on woman suffrage this fall, and New Jersey judges and juries seem to bo doing all they can to aid the cause by setting forth horrible examples of the decisions which can be rendered under existing NVvv Jirsey laws. There was. for instance, that judge who the other day declared that if any article of household furniture was not marked plainly with the wife's name in token that it had been a personal gift to her by her husband she had no right nor share of ownership in the article. Now it is a jurj' who in awarding damages to a parent for the loss of his baby son and daughter made the damages $2.H0 for the boy and only half that for the girl. The New York Tribune comments that "Those twelve good men and true might so easily have made it $1."mi each and have avoided stirring the embers of the age-long controversy over tin comparative value of daughter and son." Thi' New York World, in gathering opinions from representative women on the subject brings out the fact that most women think a girl worth at b ast twice as much as a boy. Argument over this proposition seems about as futile as the discussion a.s to whether the hen or egg came, first, as impossible of settlement as "How lug is a piece of chalk?" But this much is sure; that wherever a judge or jury can be found 10 decide that one sex is of more value to society than the other, wherever the laws permit of such decision, wherever the conditions arc such that society, bydepriving a girl of hct; full possibilities of development makes her of less value than her brother, then in that locality something is wrong with civilization. Whether the granting of woman suffrage in New Jersey is what is needed to correct thee errors or not remains for time to declare. But while this state of things exists, something is surely wi-mg with the foundations of "Jersey Justice" and the wrong is great enough to demand a speedy and effective remedy. (il.ItM.WY SOHKKINC I I. Tlu re are pleasing indications that the Herman statesmen and editors are liokjin nine to come to their senses. The most hopeful utterance from that quarter since our present controversy began comes 'from the Berlin LokalAnzeiger. The editor. Hugene Zimmerman, has dropped his former tone of defiance and condemnation. He recognizes that Bres t Wilson "d sires nothing more ami nothing less than an understanding between ;ermany and Kngland concerning the forms of maritime warfare which at the same time will issue the safety of American passengers." and he suggests til it th problem "can be solved if all interests display gooq will." l-r th- first time, a powerful Berlin newspaper admits, at hast by implication, that the German militariststattsmen and jingo newspapers have been running amuck to the harm of Cermany. IMitor Zimmerman sadistically speaks of typewriter ht roes who far from the front, are preaching war to the knife- against everybody." "We wish to act with blood and iron.' he say s. "but just because w e are fearless and determined we may look for possible ways by which to arrive at an understanding with Ameiica. We need not close up our department of incoming and outg ing oet laratious of war." continues with satiric humor, "which heretofore has worked r.obly, but it stems to me we can curtail the output somewhat without incurring a reputation fop excessive caution." The editor of the Berlin TageLlatt writes in the same in. and urges cJerman diplomats to stand firm against "jmgo and w hlp-tlK-w orld int husiasts." The president's last note, which w is above all an appeal to the German uaMon "n moral grounds, h: therefore already I t aring fruit. If the real truth regarding American conditions and ideals were properl.- yccuted to
si; or civic spirit. The advertisement of the Indiana & Michigan Klectrie Co., reproduced from the Chicago Sunday Tribune in the South Bend newspapers yesterday, stands out in marked contrast, for local patriotism, with the conduct of a local manufacturer who traveling in the south, registers, as if from Chicago, and pretends that the metropolis is his residence. We do not take it that the Indiana & Michigan claims tnat its advertising in the Chicago paper was purely I'topian. It is building for itself, but if it profits the probability is that South Bend will also profit. Tho placing of the .St. Joseph valley before the huge army of readers, .such as the Chicago Tribune has, is a good invitation for the whole valley, and. South Bend, as the metropolis of that valley naturally stands In the foreground. It is the first time, fo far as wo can recollect, of any local enterprise demonstrating so much of civic pride in its foreign adv ertiuing. The advertising' tells the story of the St. Joseph valley as well as the story of the Indiana A: Michigan Klectrie Co. It is an invitation to locate along the valley where Indiana & Michigan power and light can be had. to be sure, hut while the Indiana & Michigan is seeking that patronage.' it is perforce seeking people likely to become patrons of the rest oi us. And we have it that the company has a stack of letters a foot high in answ er to its adv ortLs ment. but hush; we hope t.'it especially those who are given to damning the Indiana t: Michigan as a "soulless, grafting corporation," will not try immediately to get a corner on the real estate market along the valley in anticipation of -holding everybody up, and making a few million out of those who mav chance to eome.
1 'I X A C I A ! i Si I It KM A CY. British exchange Is still falling in the American money market. An American dollar is now worth about $1.0- in English money. In every payment for American goods through English hills of exchange American creditors benefit to that extent, in addition to the big profit of war prices. Vast quantities of American securities, owned in Knglar.il. have been sold recently in our market, but it doesn't seem to make any difference. England still owes us so much money that her credit suffers, and the only way to re-establish her old credit is to ship here great quantities of gold, or obtain great credit loans, to cover tho expense of her war supplies, and possibly to place a big issue of war bonds here. Our hankers don't need the gold our money market is glutted with gold. The only solution, it seems, is for England to even things by obtaining the credit loans. East summer foreign nations were questioning our credit and clamoring for us to pay what we owed them. Now everybody owes us money, and the financial power heretofore the strongest in the world sets her supremacy gone. We shall hold that financial supremacy at least while the war lasts, ami for some time afterward. There is no good reason why we shouldn't hold it permanently.
In the famous cruise of the confederate cruiser Alabama, in our civil war. Captain S'emmes sank o2 vessels, boareled """i and took 2.000 men off them and didn't kill a single noncamhatant or neutral. His record should be of interest to Germany, espoc.' I ly since the confederacy at tho time of his operations was undergoing a blockade similar to the one Germany is experiencing, and which she alleges as justification for her submarines methods.
The passing by the state legislatures of resolutions on the Eusitania tragedy is generally approved, as it succeeds in keeping these bodies out of mischief for a vhort time. Some of the spring gowns have "aoron panels." but it can safely be said that it is not to protect the clothes while working in the kitchen.
A large increase in the number of women who arc learning to drive automobiles is noted, but no more seem to be learning to run sewing machines.
Many of the railroads are placing orders for new freight cars, evidently feeling that Wandering Willie needs more comfortable quarters.
Garment men announce an imminent famine in buttons. No jar to us as long as the crop of safety-pins hold out.
THE
MELTING POT
COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH VS.
IF Mr. Carnegie follows the advice of his medical adviser he will be unable to further deplete his treasury until fall. The doctor advises him to rest all Rummer, and depleting his treasury Ls about the hardest work he does. WITH us it is different. We can deplete our treasury without being conscious of over exertion. MR. I)i:.KLL', the only father old Rill Dunkle has. relates a story illustrating the marvelous vitality of the chut). To the uninitiated, it may be explained that the chuh is a species of fish. To further particularize it may be stated that the chub is a species of fresh water fish of the cyprinidae or carp family, which possibly accounts for the wonderful vitality illustrated by Bill's father's story. The common European species is Leuciscus eephalus. the cheven. In America the name is applied to various fishes of the same family of the genera Se.motilus, Squalius, Ceratichthys, etc., and also locally to several very different fishes, as the Tautog. black bas, etc. The commercial value of the chub lies in its attractiveness as bait for black bass and Its other near and distant relatives. And that completes the circle to Bill's father's illustration. MR. Dt'NKEE is a veracious fisherman, a species which in some parts is deemed rare, and he fishes for bass, pickerel and other voracious fish. According to his story, which bears every semblance of truth, he carried a pail of chubs to Diamond lake and towed one of the chubs about the lake all day without getting a strike. When he stopped the chub was alive and he brought it home in that condition. How many tlmc3 he has used it since he docs not say. The Feminine Way. First she said she would Then she said she wouldn't. Just be-eause she could She had to fay she couldn't. And when she knew she should Of course she said she shouldn't. S. H. C. ON Tuesdav the pedometer carried by Father O'Neill, the Notre Dame pedestrian, poet and scholar, showed that he had hiked L'.OOO miles since Jan. 1. 1915. That is an average of 12 miles a day with a fraction over for good measure, a record the average man will regard with a sense of awe. There are not 10 men In ifouth Rend with something else to do who could be hired to walk 12 miles a day for one consecutive day, but Father O'Neill does it 65 days in the year for fun. which to the average man is incredible. WHIEE these lines are being penned
tMe Jefferson Pleasure club is resting from its labors, and after a dayspent with itself at the lake, believe us. the Jefferson Pleasure club needs the rest. A Ray Willi tho Cnler-W cxxls. (Marquette. Kan., Tribune.) Mrs. .arn Ceder and Mrs. B. A. Woods of Gcneseo. visited with Mrs. O. R. Peterson Tuesday. IT is again comparatively safe to visit Chicaco without a pohce escort. WE see by a recent communique that tho English have occupied 1.000 yards of the German line of trenches north of Ypres. That would be about as long as the sixth and ninth holes at unnyside. The Activities of Youth. (Cor. Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette.) Thursday was "Jonah day" to Master Nathaniel Crowfick and the small two-year-old stirred up excitement that not only shook Crow's Nest to its center but extended to some of the neighboring cottages as well. After having a hard fall he wandered out on the lawn and came into serious contact with the business end of a bumble bee. later he was fished out of the laundry in the basement and his mother discovered he had been eating ball bluing. It was not supposed that he had eaten enough to cause any trouble until about one hour later while making a call at the Johnson cottuge the little fellow became very sick. Remembering the? bluing it was feared that he had eaten more than at first was supposed and excitemen reigned until Dr. Black of Ligonier. w ho was making a professional call in the neighborhood, was hastily summoned and pronounced tho trouble a bad case of indigestion aggravated by a bee feting and boat ride. POOR Miss Duke, who married young Riddle, with so many prefixes we haven't space for them, wa.s burdened with $250,000 worth of wedding nresents. consisting of diamonds ami
other junk. uch impositions are the j
penalties of wealth. Thank heaven, few American girls have to suffer them. Hence the Soalp Ioek. (From Some Court Rulings.) A Chinaman is an Indian. People vs. Hall, 4 Cal. IT is our conception of a fine sense of propriety tht-t the marines he sent to Mexico, where they are serving corn and beans. JUNE 17 was 100- per cent sunshine. PASTE that on your calendar. C. N. F.
WHAT THE PAPERS SAY
sit;i;l at ho pi:u ci;nt capacity. (Toledo Blade.) In August last, two or three weeks after the war began, the steel industry resembled some of its own products. It was flattened out. By the tirst of the year the industry had so lar recovered that it was taking uai optimist's satisfaction in operating at 4o per cent of capaci It is nowdoing business at something better than SO per cent capacity. This is a tine example of business convalescence. The year was not wanting last summer and fall that there would be no industrial recovery until after Europe was over its convulsions. The thing could be ligured out. Europe took our manufactures, absorbed our surplus mine products, invested in our securities at the rate of millions and millions a year. While the war was on, we .vould not onlyhave to take care of our surplus products, but also buy back the securities, a thing decidedly disturbing, to our financial and industrial mechanism. The deluge of securities has been stemmed. We are now exporting more goods and raw materials than we ever did before. Domestic markets are improving daily, and their power of absorption is constantly increasing. S'teel is a dependable index to trade conditions in America. As P. is depressed, so is the rest of industries. As it prospers, you know the country to be prosperous. Its restoration to health in the face of unhappy and distressing prospects demonstrates magnificent convalescing abilities of American abilities.
It is exceedingly comforting to people who are anxious for war to know that substitutes can always be hired for a ery moderate cash sum. Some of our exchanges are conducting interesting "public forums." in which the editor asks h.mself manyinteresting questions.
The usual form of a protest to the warring powers seems to be that they would better look out or we will send them another protest.
When vou ask some people what the latest war news is. they reply by telling you where the Federal league has established new teams. New if congress were only in session, what thrilling warnings would be issued to Germany under the influence of the proper amount of mint julep. Some peopb feel free to throw litter in the streets since it will all be cared fyr in clan-up wwek next year.
WOMANKIND AND HUM. (New York Sun.) The woman's suf.'rage party does not propose to he the tail to any other party's kite, nor does it propose to load itself with any other party's doctrines as a side line of political wares. As Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt put it. "the suffragists are not working lor the pleasure of pulling somebody else's chestnuts out of the tire." This attitude is understood as haying especial reference to the prohibition movement. If there- is an impression abroad that the prohibition party owns the suffragist party, it is erroneous. That is one strongly insisted upon specification in this recent suffrage declaration of independence, em the other hand, the prohibition party is equally insistent that it be entirely disassociated in the public mind trom the suffragists. Many prohibitionists are lukewarm toward suffrage, if not openly opposed to it. It is said that there are even prohibitionists who will vote against suffrage. They are confident they can win their cause on its merits in exchange for votes for prohibition. In other words, neither the prohibition nor the suffragist party wishes to come to its own under a mortgage of promises and pledges. Speaking for the suffragists on this point. Mrs. Catt said: "Our strict non-partisan attitude may have delayed the coming of woman suffrage, but when it does come women will be absolutely free to choose paries, candidates and causes without obligation to any party." Undoubtedly the tendenev to identify the causes of prohibition and woman suffrage is pretty general. The special interests necessarily most hostile to prohibition have not attempted to concc;'! the fact that they regard the suffrage agitation as a dangerous thinking movement against them. They seem to have accepted it as a self-evident proposition that all women, once thev have the ballot, will immediately line up in the prohibition ranks. But this seems hardly war" ranted by the record. Out of the 1 states which have adopted prohibition, only six are woman suffrage states. Kansas. Colorado. Orccon. Washington. Arizona and Idaho. This of iu-e! would seem to justify tho
prohibitionist's faith that he can win his cause without the help of women. There are in reality only live; of the 11 suffrage states to be taken into the account in considering suffrage ar- a factor in the prohibition campaign. Moreover in two of these rive states, Colorado and Idaho, it took the women voters, if they are really responsible for the event, 21 and 19 years, respectively, after they had the ballot to make, up their minda that they wanted prohibition also. Thus it would appear that both suffragists and prohibitionists are and of right ought to be free and independent political entities.
I ui :a i n a t( ; i it onso u :ti:. (Torre Haute star.) The examination by tho naval board, it is reported, is likely to result in having the battleship New Hampshire placed on the reserve list. The keel of the New Hampshire was laid 10 years ago. The ship was constructed at a cost of 154, 1CJ. It has a speed of 18 knots and carries four 12-inch guns in addition to the usual complement of smaller guns. When the NewHampshire went into commission it was considered one of the finest ships afloat; r.o-Wy it is practically clisscd as obsolete. The rapid development in sea lighting ships has revolutionized the old idea that a battleship is good for 20 years of service. The finding in connection with the New Hampshire Indicate that at the present rate of progress we must be prepared to renevv our warship equipment every decade instead of once in a score of years. The significance of that is not limited to the expense involved in cutting in half the time we are aide to use a ship. Along with reducing the life of the dreadnaught we have dou'jted the cost of construction. It is not likely, however, that the rate of change experienced in the last decade will be maintained in the future. There will be some improvements in fighting ships but those are not likely to continue to run to increased size and cost as has been the case. Already there is a disposition to go in for submarines, battle cruisers and other types instead of placing the minimum of reliance on the dreadnaughts. But, whatever the tendency may be in regard to kinds of ships, it is apparent that nothing more than temporary efficiency can be maintained without constant and rapid renewals and at heavy expense.
thi: hirlt: in thi-: schools. (Kokomo Dispatch.) We aie likely to get a wrong view of the effort to make the Bibb? a part of public chool study. "We get this view because we too often assume that the object is to secure a foothold for some denomination or oilier; that it is a deeply laid scheme to further some dogmatic view of religion. In sober truth it is nothing at all of the kind. Whatever ideas of the Bible may be. it requires only a littb? analysis to believe that the great Book is one of the world's greatest products from a literary standpoint alone; and if taken in comparison with its marvelous and uplifting philosophy it Is the greatest possession of mankind. We do not say this from a religious standpoint, we say it frem the standpoint of those who are seriously seeking for that spiritual support of which sooner or later every human toul realizes the need. Nothing could be wiser than tho study of the Bible for our young people; a study wholly exclusive of any comment looking toward dogmatic religion. The literary value alone would abundantly justify the study and the hoards f education could tind ample room to include its study in the curricula from that viewpoint alusu
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Morris says to every employee, "Keep Quality Up, Always." Morris says, "Use every care, every turn you make." That's why Supreme Food Products have earned a good name and keep it. That's why Supreme Food Products arc uniformly good. That's why Supreme Food Products are sold to careful housewives over and over again.
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