South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 174, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 23 June 1915 — Page 6

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS. 210 T.T COLFAX AV. KatrJ &n nd clnr mnttvr at th I'-N.rflcc at South Ib-n.I, Indiana

si r.s 1 : i: 1 1 t Dallr flni Sunday In B'ltntirr, In Hiv, P't jr.ir Dally an! Sunday tn n irnn., by m-iil. pr yrir ?.Tno

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chables l. (;oi-T. Tho passing of rx-Ma yor f'harlcs I. Goctz. while not a surprise, brings sorrow to f ri riIs in South !!f ml. equaling In number, perhaps. tho.- of any other man in tho city. Mayor ( tz was a man anions rn n, anl tiio.se who kiifw him. actually knew him, for he was exactly what he pretended to be. .orrowing relatives may re.t assure d of the complete sympathy of all, and especially of those who knew him best, whether as fellow-citizen or neighbor; as friend or fellow-man. Kx-Major ti(,, of course, had his enembs- political enemies. and they were not all of opposition parties. A public man of strength always has enemies. especial!- political enemies. It is to his credit that he had such enemies. too among good conscientious men, for It decides that he also was a man of convictions from which ho was not always to be swayed. Seldom have these, when pressed for an excuse for their opposition, been able to prodaec any very worth considering. We are all so wont to have everything our own way and to dislike those who withhold It from us. Mayor Goctz grvc the. city of South Bend one of. the best administrations of city affairs that it has ever had, despite all criticism, and tho whole city honors him. He wa.i honest with the people. to the last cont. You can ciisagree with a man in a republic like ours, even in our municipal life, and be honest about it, and yet he may be. and probably is, just as honest in his disagreement with you. Home public officials foreKo such honesty, for "policy's sake," but if Mr. Goetz was ever guilty of such offanse. we lack of credentials. His lack of "policy" is among the things for which he has been most keenly criticised, for in u politician it seems a requisite of success, but how different when a man's career is finished and ho stands on the brink of the grave. Wo rather anticipate that in his late passing hours, Mr. Ooetz found his failure to trade honesty for policy, among his most priceless assets. Mr. Goctz, however, passes from us not alone as an ex-mayor of the city, but as one of our most substantial manufacturers and business men. He has been cf service to the city in more than matters political always coin cerned in the upbuilding of the community ami n.aking life the mora worth living for his fellows. We say. South Rend may well bow solemnly, and thoughtfully in honor of this de-. parted citizen, and it does. He will be missed, thoush his pasin- has long been expected. His suffering has been, long and tenacious. We may be glad that it i.! over, but that will not lessen our grief for that suffering, or that it should have rendered death inevitable. He fought a good fight and even to the last breath, thoush he lost with the grim reaper, proved a foe that was worthy of his steel. those. INDIAN.WOLIS INDICTMM NTS. The indictments rrom Indianapolis charging Thomas Taggart, Mayor Joe Bell. Chief of Police Perrott. and others of tho capital cit; with conspiracy to defraud at the elections last fall, need surprise no one particularly, except as to the prominence of somo of the men indicted. To one who knows anything of the facts, or alleged facts, upon which the indictments arc based, there is but small doubt but that there are a number of Indianapolis politicians who should have been sojourning with Warden Fogarty at Michigan City long ago. Besides, the. republicans at Indianapolis, have been very politically determined ever since tho last fall election, and for some time before, to see to it that very democrat in the state, if possible, is smeared with some sort of indictment. Between the facts, and a prosecuting attorney, judge, anJ grand jury, all bent In the same direction, it Is not surprising that somebody should have been run to earth.. It is queer, however, that in th3 face of the alleged frauds charged against tho democrats In the election last fall, the victory should have gon to the republic. ins. They made a clean sweep of Marlon county and that by goodly majorities. It must be that some of those sobriquettcd Sam Craw-fords. Connie Macks.. Tyrus Cobbs. Hans Wagners, Jack Johnsons. Wm. A. Sundays, Herman Kodcheavers. Johnny I'everses. etc.. registered and voted from lum-existing addresses, afur all. otcd the republican ticket. Maybe the "siush fund" of the democrats wasn't big enough to hold them, even after it had registered them, Lu be this as it may. what has been goir.g on in Terre Haute and Indianapolis seems to be approaching its Waicrb-o, and. we have no disposition to condone any of the cussdnis that is btlng uprooted in the process. Our ngrct is that the democrats of the state, driven to desperation by republican crookedness, when "he re puhlban party was in power, should hae ivi d laws as it did during the Marshall admit. Mrat;.r.. cab-nUttd o crriict tht?-f republican eviis. only i' ii.'m inai u ns set ,i noose lor its own neck. We do nut t ritici the raeage cf the-law, but that democrats

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1'nUy md Sunday fT tt.e we It c.irrW in:iy. jncl eopy . S'jydy, ulr. jr ropy ..lo having provided it, should ima-ine that they could go on playing the eld republican game without being is much subject to it as? the republicans would b if they were In .such power as would enable them to put U over The rlay for unpunished corrupt cleoItions in Indiana has potic, and lha ' -'"'ner that all parties accede to that fact, and stop tampering, the IWter It will be for their own causes, ana for tho state, and to thir miht be led the. individual manipulators. Whether the Marion county raiui jury made any effort to find ou' how many of the alleged floaters, registered under assumed names fromiirtJtious addresses, were later bought over with republican slush funds, thus giving the republicans their majorities, will never be known. We would not excuse what the democrats did; ' not for a single instant, but we would liko to have seen a clean sweep made of it even back to the election that landed Lew Shank in the mayor's chair. The statute of limitations has worked line for the republicans since 1111. Wise, indeed, they were, to wait until there could be no backkicking into their own history, but it is better that the halt should be called on the democrats than not at all. It the Indianapolis aggregation aro the real guilty culprits, we hope they will get exactly what the Terre Haute crowd was given. Tho democratic party, when it went into power in 190S, was swept there by the votes of the state, quite as much as anything else, upon its promise to clean up the elections that the republicans had made rotten to the core. They went as far as to give the state a very creditable corrupt practices act, and it had its effect in some locations, but quite evidently not too much so in others. The voice of the people can never be heard when fraud corrupts the ballot box anywhere in any election district. Corruption at Indianapolis or Terre Haute in a state or national election robs the vote of South Bend of a portion of its force, and so we arc interested in clean elections, even in Indianapolis and Terre Haute. Wo are sorry for the gentlemen w ho have been "scotched," only to tho extent of their innocence, or, if g iilty. for their near-sightedness and lack of civic self-respect. PRIVATE AID Oil PUBLIC JUSTICE. In the discussion now going on in New York about the proposition to establish a public defender to handle tho cases of persons accused of crime who have not the means to engage private counsel, the existence of an efficient Legal Aid society has been urged as a reason why there is no need for a salaried public defender. This will strike many persons as being quite as absurd In its reasoning as to say that "because there is a society for the prevention of cruelty to children, there is no need for a public inspector to enforce the child labor laws." -, "because we have hospitals supported by private charity, we have no need of public health and dispensary service." No question of criticism of tho Legal Aid societies of the country is involved. They were established by people who saw a need for those un- I able to pay legal fees. They have been a very great force for good, and will undoubtedly continue to be so. Moro support from the people in general is what they ought to have, not less. But their chief value has been, and should continue to be, in settling cases out of court. Domestic relations aro often settled by these societies, inheritance troubles which threaten to split families are straightened out without suits, small neighborhood difficulties are adjusted. Until the state gets ready to take over their machinery and pay for it, as it has in many cases for medical aid of the same kind, the Legal Aid societies must continue to bo supported by private charity. That a large part of this support comes from the legal profession docs great honor to it. as the self-sacrifice and generosity of doctors does to theirs. Meantime, for the presentation of cases in court by people unable to afford lawyers of their own, the public defender is needed. He balances the prosecuting attorney. He helps to make the presumption that a man is "innocent until proven guilty" a reality instead of a farce. AMERICA OK Kl'SSIA? After several months of having it drilled into us that Leo M. Frank is a Jew. and that evidently such is the chief offense of which he is guilty, in the estimation of some Georgians, our last notation is that a mob was gathering about the home of Gov. John M. Slaton at Atlanta, because of his having commuted the death sentence of "the Jew" to one of life imprisonment. The militia bad been called out to give the governor protection Let us see now: Is Georgia somewhere in the United S"t;s or is it in Russia? Somehow ve get these locations uh re the Jew is in such bad odor, j that law and justiee have no scales for I him. occasionally mixed. j But happily in this IUnco the

militia seems to be on the right side of the fence. Perhaps the most brainless thing in the world is a mob. and a mob incited by sace prejudice Is doubtless brainless. We take it that Gov. Slaton was with'n his rights even if he knew Frank to be guilty, and notwithstanding the doubts. It is what the power of clemency is vested In him for. Capital punishment is state murder at its best. We would have had less sympathy for that mob, had it gone to the point of compelling the militia to fill it with something less scattering than buckshot, than most anything that has called upon us for our sympathy in a coon's age. The place for mob-bent Jew-haters isn't in (Jcorgia at all. They belong over in Russia in th front ranks of the czar army, where the German and Austrian shot and Phell are falling tho thickest and fastest.

c( )m.m i ;. dable mov i; 1 ext. In line with our suggestion of Sunday, and on previous occasions, we are glad to note that the city civic quarters are planning to take up Instruction in civil government next winter, to constitute a part of the enter tainment at each meeting. Civil government, local, state and national; American history and ideals of democracy such a course of instruction .is a part of the civic center work, would prove invaluable. We understand that the bureau of immigration, department of labor, at Washington, has made requisition on the commissioner of education for course of lessons along those lines, which might, or might not, be of in terest to the local committee, but even though the committee might prefer to prepare its own lessons, perhaps it could use these to good advantageby indirection. Anyhow it looks as though "Amcri canization" work in South Bend were to extend beyond the 4th of July, and that is a good omen. We are, through the civic centers, to undertake a sort of post-graduate system of education in political and economic matters, ex actly what the new American has needed since the republic first bloom ed. and there are a lot of old Ameri cans as well as new taking- part in It, is quite as important as the instruction itself, and that it should be mixed in with the regular social center program, renders this phase of the un dertaking' the more probable. No course that could be pursued would be likely to serve better for tho elimination of hyphens from American citizenship. TWO BILLION DOLLAlt TltADl! 1IAIANCM Sir George Paish, financial expert of the London Statist and adviser of the British government, prophesied last summer that the United States would, as the war proceeded become the financial center of the world. Wo have already attained that distinction. He prophesied then that our favorable trade balance for the year would reach a billion dollars, and that forecast has been closely approximated. We are prepared, now, to listen respectfully when he announces that our excess of exports over imports for the next twelve months may reach $2,000. Of 0,000. The greatest favorable balance we ever had, before tho present billion-dollar year, was $666,000,000 in 1908. A two-billion balance in our favor would be precisely threo times that. Such a situation would mean that we could use two thousand million dollars a year in buying up American securities now held abroad, and in lending money to foreign nations, without in the slightest degree impairing our own domestic credit or money supply. With a billion-dollar wheat crop in prospect and other crops doing well, with the steel industry reviving and the prospect of getting ahead to the extent of two billion dollars a year in our foreign business, the few business pessimists left might just as well stop croaking. New York is arranging to sell a 146.000,000 bond issue drawing interest at four and one-half per cent. It's hard to see why New York, or anyother city, should havo to pay that rate of interest, particularly at a time when money is a drug on the market. The savings bank depositor, as a jule, gets only three per cent for his money. Depositors would doubtless welcome the opportunity of investing their savings in good municipal bonds at three and one-half or four per cent, if proper facilities were provided for the transaction. This New York bond issue may possibly be sold at $2,000,000 premium, but the mere difference between four per cent and four and one-half per cent interest for fifty vears will cost tho city $11,500,000. The other night, on one of the local streets, one car rammed the rear of another, and, several ladies in both were terribly frightened. There was a big noise and the glass flew hither and yon. No, Grandma, dear, it wasn't a jitney bus. nor two Jitney buses but the cars weren't much bigger than jitney buses at that. Pctrograd dispatch says that Gran I Duke Nicholas headquarters are on "a special train in which ho jumps from one field of activity to another." We'd noticed that Nick was doing some jumping but didn't know it was by rail. Carranza refuses offers of armistice, hoping that by taking Mexico City he can secure; recognition by Undo Sam. Several other fellows have taken that town and hardly been recognized j even by the newspapers. The Chicago street car strike at least succeeded in demonstrating that the Jitneys are mighty handy little things to have around in cases of emergency.

THE

COM? TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

Till: liKiHTTO livi:. So precious are the rights of man. He guards them with his life Without his nUits the life of man ould not be worth the strife. And among the fundamentals Life itself and liberty And the pursuit of happiness Are the high hope of the free. Man also has the right to give. His life at any price Which he esteems as worthy Of the supreme sacrifice. But who shall with authority Assume at will to take. By force, or law. or precedent. That which he did not make.' BUSINESS is subject to so many influences it Is rarely free from fluctuations in any season. These are anticipated and as far as possible provided against. No foresight, however, can periscope the time when business will not be unsatisfactory if it does not show the increase, anticipated. Nearly equalling past performances is not sufficient. Any Increase short of calculations breeds discontent. THIS condition, we are confident, ia not a reflex of sordidness, but a disappointment from the sentimental aspect. "MEN," said a commercial traveler, "work for their homes and the pleasure of doing business rather than merely for the sake of making money and piling up riches. They are building for the generations to come." AND that Is an agreeable and, we believe in the main, a, truthful way to look at it. Bouquet For tho T. P. A. (From Some Court Bulings. ) A commercial traveler is a gentleman whose profession makes him occupy a much higher station, socially and commercially, than that of a mero day laborer. Briscoe vs. Montgomery. 93 Ga. IF those Indianapolis indictments turn out to be something more than legal documents Terre Haute may be forgotten. DIGGING for hidden treasure in Evansville is our idea of nothing so much as futility. When you succeed in hiding any treasure in that city you don't. NOW IS THE TIME. Now is the opportune time to propose, boys. For the same reason that the poet says, "Make hay while iho sun shines," we say, "Propose whil3 the war is on." It is a very simple matter to propose successfully; and for the skeptical, we shall endeavor briefly to outline how an unfortunate wooer may obtain the cherished results. To begin with, remove the patent medicine almanac from the nail, and discover when tho moon will again be full. Having ascertained this fact, arrange an assignation with tho young lady of your desire, for that date. When calling upon her at the appointed time, let her lead you to tho softly cushioned lawn swing under the pear tree, and sit down beside her. After a few casual preliminary remarks nhft"' the weather, the silvery moon, the fleecy clouds, and the beautiful evening, let your left arm (supposing that she is reclining next to your heart) surrcpticiously encirclo the fair shoulders of the beloved, draw her a little closer, coo like a dove, and ogle her with eyes of overflowing love. Then draw her still closer, and p?p the question, an appropriate formula for which may be found in any recent newspaper report of a divorce case. She will have expected this, and will droop her curly head, blush deliciouslv. and lisp sweetly, "Oh, WHAT THE SHE WAS WANTED. (San Diego Post.) This is a pretty good old world when all is told filled with kind and loving hearts a plenty, if one but seeksthem out. A day or two ago, a "business per sonal" appeared in a Los Angelas paper. It was inserted by a little sweet faced woman, made helpless by rheumatism, who simply asked "if anybody wanted a grandmother." Then she spent a troubled, sleepless night wondering if the busy world would sec her little ad, or, if seeing. give it heed. By all established tenets of the misanthrope, that heartless world was due to jeer and sneer but it didn't. From as far away as San Diego, early .next day, came telephonic responses offering to share homes, and comforts with the little grandmother. In Los Angeles several hurried to the given address, to find themselves too late. Almost before the dew was off the flower, another woman, a widow with a little daughter, had "adopted" a mother for herself and a grandmother for her little one, and with radiant countenance "stood guard" over her treasure. And more: Offers of financial assistance poured in, while several physicians called to offer free medical treatment for her rheumatism, and o, at eventide, the sun which had risen upon a sad and hopeless woman, shed its rays upon a countenance wreathed in smiles and eyes that shone again with the light of hope. Perhaps it's God's sunshine and the flowers and the fruits and the innumerable song birds, with which California has been blessed, that move the hearts of its people to acts like this. Maybe the same hand which sowed the seeds of the Golden Gate's richest harvest, at the same time sowed the seeds of kindness In the hearts of the inhabitants, so that all might be in harmony. Who knows? DEMOCRATIZING THE NAVY. (Wheeling Register.) When Josephus Daniels became secretary of the navy he immediately went to work upon plans to make the service more attractive to enlisted men. One of the things he did was to encourage them to prepare themselves for entrance to the naval academy at Annapolis. That some of them Possessed the requisite ambition is indicated In th announcement by Sec'y Daniels that 53 enlisted men applied for appointment under the law of June 30, 1314. and that 11 of them have passed their examinations and qualified as midshipmen. This indicates not only the character and quality of the men who serve in the United States navy, but it proves their disposition to take advantage of the opportunity for improvement and advancement which the service now offers. The progress i;t thesa men will be watched with in tcrett. Tho earlier appointment."?

MELTING POT

Deah. thith ith tho thudden " Then jou look at her like an anxious question man;, at the same time being prepared to assume an ashwi grav pallor, when she extricates herself from your affectionate embrace, and pouts a heartrending "No." This having occurred, instead of the usual sillv pleading, junv.i um suddenlv, thro.v out your manly chest, draw your imaginary two-edged sword, and exclaim dramatically. -Fie. Woman. I will fight and die for the kaiser." Whereupon Fhe will wildb- fling her soft arms about you, kiss you, and promise to become your future wife. n. i:. n. ANOTHER murder has beer, committed by a "harmless" lunatic, this time in Warsaw. The frequency with which this happens prompts tho suggestion that there are no harmless lunatks. Our Righteous Indignation. (Detroit News.) And what shall we of the United States do about Mexico, gentlemen? Must we continue to stand idly by and FREEDOM FOR FRANK MAY MEAN LYNCH LAW Headline, witness her utter lawlessness, hor total disrespect for organized government? Strange indeed that that sadly misguided country cannot pull heivsclf together, develop leaders who will diSOUTH CAROLINA CALIS OUT MILITIA TO QUELL FURIOUS RACE CONFLICT Ilea ciline. rect her destinies out of her present condition of anarchy and political chaos. For five years nov we of the United States have given Mexico an opportunity to find herself. For fiv years half-mobs have fought and p'llased SCORES ARE INJURED WHEN CHICAGO POLICE BATTLE WITH CAR-STRIKING MOBS Headline. and committed crimes against commonwealths and against citizens and private property. Whole states are virtually without a semblance of law and orucr. SHERIFF SLAIN WITH HIS NEGIiO riUHONER Headline. Bandits raid and ravage the countryside, with no respect for officials who have sworn to protect life ind the rights of property. Most pitiable of all is the plight of the women and cbiloren of the cities and towns. Babies are being neglect ed and at times neither they nor the HALF OF BABIES WHO DIE IN AMERICAN CITIES COULD BE SAVED r Y PROPER CARE. SAYS CITY HEALTH OFFICER Headline, mothers r.ae sufficient food and clothing nor proper housing. Where will the route being followed bv unfortunate Mexico lead BUTTE NEWSPAPER PLANT DESTROYED BY DYNAMITE Heaul.n". her? Without order and without law her road is paved with contempt for both. Gentlemen, what shall be done to save Mexico? "HOW would it do." queries S. M.. "to suggest to T. R. and W. J. B. to collaborate on 'What we know -about the effect of infusing warmth to frozen vipers?" Just to keep the pot effcrvescing?" THE pot nt Washington having ceased to effervesce, that might help some. TWO perfect days, and in June at that. Maybe we'll call her swcot again. THE humid jade! C. N. F. PAPERS SAY from the ranks of enlisted men havo Justified the new departure, and it is believed that means of enabling a man to go from apprentice seaman to admiral can have no other eficct than to elevate naval standards. AD WHAT PAPERS SAY Till: NEW MENACE. (Terre Haute Tribune.) The newest complication for this government cropped out yesterday when Gen. Maytorena of Mexico uttered a defy to any American landing party that might seek to set foot on the western coast ef 'Mexico. Gen. Maytorena will have to figure with the marines about that. It is the duty of every great nation to protect its citizens who may be residing or sojourning abroad. Tho United States has a peculiarly onerous duty, because of the unstable conditions in many of the southern republics and the propensity of Americans to pursue their livelihoods in these lands. To meet the responsibility tho United States maintains an emergency police force for foreign duty. This force Ia called the marine corps. Like the police department of a city or the constabulary of a state, the marines are always ready for action. Except for service at home, the regular army "Is not available at an instant's call, for problems of transportation require some delay. But the marines are attached to vessels of the navy. The vessels are their home camps and no preparation for movement is needed. Repeatedly the marines have proveel their usefulness. Occasionally, an in the disturbance in Nicaragua two years ego, the marines start and finish a little war fell , themselves. They may be the American advance guard, eioing necessary work before the army can get under way. as at Vera Cruz. Usually, however, their work does not go that far. The little job which will be attended to at Guaymas in properly and typically marine corps work, and in a cry practical way justifies the e.xistciice of that body. A PLAN THAT FAIIJ'D. (Newcastle Dufly Times.) The best laid plans frequently fail. A few days ago the progressive state committee met in Indianapolis, and it was arranged for a stampede back to the G. O. P. When Toner made the motion tn that effect it was killed by a vote of nine to three. The nine members determined to maintain tho present organization and filled the vacancies made by the resignations. One of the nine members stated that before anj move was made to go back to the G. O. P. the progressives desired to see what kind of platform th republicans would adopt in 1916. what kind f candidates they would nominate and what element would be in control of the party. If the Watson. Goodrich and Fair banks crowd are still in the saddle It would bo the game crowuVthat drove

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