South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 193, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 12 July 1915 — Page 6

6 jIONDAY, JULY ir. 1915. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS. 210 WHST COLFAX AV.

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now wiriu; takfn to task. We arc clad to learn from Mr. Louis T. Shirk, manner of the Oppcnhoimtr Cipar tor that the story hrousht to us and commentrd upon Sunday morninpr. to tho effect that if it were not for this papor. Mayor Keller would lift the lid," especially with respect tc penny machine in clear stores, was quite without foundation. Mr. Shirk's communication appears in the ' Letters of the People" column today, with respect to which, furthermore, we have hut on criticism, and that is that he should presumo from our comment Sunday, that wc had taken tho lans:uai?r charged to the mayor In tho least prrlof'y. Had he taken the trouble to rea what we had 10 say. a trifle carefully, he might have found these expressions: "Bully for the mayor. If he said it. with but ono exception,"and then in anoher place: "However, wo disagree with the assertion doubting that ho made it, that South Kend 13 being all shot to pieces." And wc beg to inform our critic, here and now, that wo never did take the remarks Mayor Keller was ha id to have mado in tho least seriously, further than to answer it mainly as an answer to certain estimable gentlemen in South Bend who have been considerably dissatisfied of late becauso of our refusal to keep r. tu,;iiK at the mayor's policies, anV. t c not openly urtrinff him to "lift the Lid, ' for their more or less personal benefit. We hope that Mayor Keller doesn't need to foar The Ncws-Tiirvs or any other newspaper, in order to kep his campaign promises. "Wo Insist farther that we have shown him about as much respect for keeping those promises, and about as few insults, as some of those gentlemen who have been seekln? to make it appear that tho only reason tho mayor keeps the "lid" on is because ho is afraid of The News-Times which he has no reason to be as long as he docs tho right thing. It is about like some of the stories that have como to us that the mayor renta his private property for immoral purposes; like the damnable lie Circulated last winter by bar-fly and cigar store gossip, that when he visited a session of th legislature he was caught in ft bawdy house down there. We have been running these lies to earth for a year-and-a-half and the communication from Mr. Shirk merely explodes another one. We are more than pleased that we said what we did Sunday. Had we not done so, the story, tho real "Insult " to tho mayor would probably have been current in the cigar stores and bar rooms for tho next six months. The publication has served to bring out a flat denial from tho man or one of the men. to whom it was said the executive told it. and furthermore, it provides w with an excuse for denouncing the rank falsehoods, which wo have investigated, with respect to the mayor renting property to house immorality, and ditto, with regard to his conduct at Indianapolis. We hope it will not be insisted that there is "one paper in the city that cannot be depended upon to tell the truth," about these matters too?

to show a profit took the profit away from their competitors. The traffic affected is tremendous one-fourth of the tonnage of our entire merchant marine, and nearly onethird as much trn-mileage as is carried by all the railroads of the United States.

WAKINC UP mix A. Says Yuan Shi Kai, president of the Chines republic, in a proclamation setting forth China's position as a result of her yielding to Japan's demands; "We are ashamed of the humiliation, but should we blame others while we ourselves are at fault? Our own weakness has invited the insult, and I feel that I am a man of little virtue and ability. However," he adds, by way of half-apology for the government's action, "v e have no risht to stake the existence of a nation; therefore we have to work out Us salvation with care." There is such honest sincerity in these words that they leave no doubt of China's humiliation. While Japan seems not to have actually gobbled up Chinese territory or overthrown Chinese autonomy, she has come so near doing both that she has dealt a bitter blow to the nation's pride. But in the very fact that China keenly feels tho indignity, and is ashamed of her weakness, there hope for her. It apears to be tho first time in China's long history of foreign domination and tyranny that her people have felt such a sense of political phame. It is evidence of a new national spirit. When a nation comes to realize that it is "of little virtue and ability" instead of whining, and confesses manfully that its misfortunes are its own fault, there is hope for it. China must yet wipe out the shame, not in blood, let us hope, but in peaceful rivalry, by means of the intellectual, industrial and political progress of which the nation la capable. If humiliation is a spur to such progress, Japan, with the worst intentions, has done China a great favor.

iaki; SHIPS ;o TO SUA. A new type of merchantmen is soon to carry the American Has in the Atlantic trade. It is the Great Lakes freighter, long and narrow .with the engine placed so far astern that when the vessel is sailing light the bow sticks up high in the air. The interior of these craft is wholly given up to freight space, owing to the fact that they were built chiefly to carry iron ore and coal. So long, low and clear is the stretch of deck space amidships that in rough weather it is Impossible to pass foruard or aft. These freak ships will doubtless attract much interest abroad. Though intended only for the lakes, they are fcald to be adapted equally well to ocean traffic. The Atlantic is seldom IDugher than the Great lwikcs are at times. Storms, too. are not so sudden and freakish at sea, and when there is a hurricane the ship can run from it as it cannot do in the confined Lake region. This reinforcement of our foreign and coastwise fleet is due to th decision of the interstate commerce commission, to the effect that it is illegal for the railroads to operate freight lines on the lakes. Sixty-three of the largest steamers, many of them capable of earning 12,000 ton cargoes must be Kot rid of. A dozen or more have already been sold to Atlantic transportation companies. They will te cut in bo, to ena-ble them to pass through the locks of the Welland canal on their Journey to the Atlantic via the St. Lawrence river. The result not expected to lower freight rates on the Great Iakps through increased competition. It may even bring higher rates, enabling the independent boat owners to make i netur living thar. they hae for some year. The supply of boats has exceeded the demand, and the rates esUtiUhcd by railroads ihzi didn't have

uxxixtual luxiturrixc;. The arrest in various parts of tho United States of Red Cross officers vo were recruiting soldiers for the Montenegrin army Is a gratifying evidence of the care with which our government is enforcing neutrality. It would be an easy matter to wrink at such a mild Infraction of our laws and public policy , as Is Involved in mustering a few Montenegrin immigrants to reinforce Kinp Nicholas tiny army. But the principle . the same as it would be if we perm': ed English representatives to raise a big army here for Great Britain. A distinction is made between Montenegro, England, Italy and certain other nations on the one hand, and Germany and France on the ether. These last two countries carry their reservists on tho military rolls at home, and the announcement that they have called those reservists to the colors cannot be construed as "enlisting men on American soil to servo in a foreign army." The nations of the former group, not having such h, reservist system, cannot recruit soldiers here without acting in violation cf our penal code, and so much reeruitipp cannot be permitted. T".e enlisted men, it appears, are not held responsible it is the recruiting officers who are culpable. In the present case they may possibly get off easy because they seem to have acted ignorantly, but henceforth there will bo

no excuse for ignorance.

nlrable objects, each with its proper form and color and its proper position in space. Her experience is a reminder of the perpetual marvel of sisht which the rest of us have taken all our conscious lives, as a matter of course, isnorinK the fact that all of us in. babyhood had to learn to use our eyes Just as Mis? Carlyle is learning to use hers.

MUX AS TKKKS WALKING. The man in the Scriptures, who had been blind from hts birth, "saw men as trees walking" when his sight was given him by a miracle. Miss Tomsynna Carlyle, a Pasadena college student .also blind from birth, received her sight the other day by a modern miracle of science. After 25 years of total darkness, vision came to her from a two-minute surgical operation, and when she turned to look at her mother for the first time, the mother's features "were meaningless to her." She already knew the form of her mother's face, as she kne.v other objects from her sense of touch. "But," she says. "I know mother no better n, for having seen her." She is "unable to classify" such commcn things as flowers, dogs, cats, shrub?, chairs and tables. The light waves enter her eyes as they enter the eyes of others. 'and form images on the retina, but that delicate sensitive film of nerve-ends is untrained, and the brain has not yet learned to interpret the sensations it receives. Everything visible is jumbled together in a strange blur. The world that was o fami'iar to the blind clrl is all confusion to tne girl w ho sees. Some colors please her and others are repulsive. "Object? moving swiftly frighten me" she says, '"and in crossing streets I close my eyes and then walk forward rejoicing in :.iy safety." She will learn, little by little, to transform her startling and chaotic visual impressions into definite, recog-

tiu: di:li;i: or laws. "I had a count made not long ago in the library of cont;resi-." says Elihu Knot, "of the number of laws that had been passM in five years ending on Dec. 1. 101::. I found that more than $2,000 laws bad been passed by congress and the state legislatures in this country in that five years, and I found that there had been reported during that five years and published in 630 volumes of reports of the courts more than O.",0O0 decisions of courts of last resort in this country. Now, not even Mr. Choate knows them all by heart. How can you conduct your business and keep out of Jail?" How can any man, whether in business or not. keep out of Jail, with thoe 62.000 laws and 65.000 court decisions on his trail, re-inforced by tho hundreds of thousands of laws and decisions of other years? Perhaps the reason is the very fact hinted at by Mr. Boot that no human being can possibly keep track of them. Anybody would think that the leal pp. fession, in sheer despair at trying to keep up with legislation and court decisions, would try to curb the output, limiting the scope of legislation to essential things, and reforming out semi-legislative judicial system.

Letters of the People

MAXAGUU OPPUXIIUIMUU CHS All COMPANY TALKS HACK. Editor News-Times: If the dope that you had in your editorial in today's paper is a sample of what one may expect in your columns there is certainly one newspaper in the city that cannot be depended upon to tell the truth. I refer to your editorial as to how you are keeping tho lid on the town. You say that ihero were a couple cigar dealers who called on Mayor Keller and requested a return of the penny machines and that he was willing, but was afraid to permit it on account of The NewsTimes. The truth of the matter is that the writer last week called on the mayor and asked that we might be allowed to operate merchandise cards to enable us to move a lot of fancy goods that there is a slow sale for, and to be allowed to stimulate sales by putting in dice boxes ns is the custom in nearly every city, town and hamlet in the country. At that time, to show him that we did not feel ;he request to be unreasonable, a list of earnings a few years back, together with tho earnings under his administration were shown him. Mr. Keller then said that he was sorry, but had taken the stand on the start that nothing of this kind would be allowed and that he could not see his way clear to retract. Your paper was not mentioned, nor anyone connected with it, and it seems quite out of place for you to be thinking it is out of fear of your sheet that the laws in South Bend are being enforced. This letter is not by any means an endorsement of the Keller form of administration, as we are not, and have not been for him in a political way, but wo feel that when ono knows where a man stands and he sticks to it that he deserves something better than the insult that you have handed to him in today's paper. While on the subject it might be well to say that I have talked to nearly every clear dealer in the down town section and they every one have told me that they do not want penny marhines back. We are not feuch a blood

thirsty crowd of men that we want to see men smoke and chew themselves to death, but it is a fact that 90 per cent of our trade are men who like some means of amusement and as it of course helps our sales we feel hurt to bo without them. Yours truly. LOUIS T. SHIRK. South Bend, July 11, 1913. Copy to Mayor Keller. DO T1IK TAXPAYKUS W ANT CITY TAXES KAISUn 10 PEHCEXT. Editor News-Times: This is the substance of the petitions ttlcd with the Board of Safety. 1 notice someone has figured out that the raises asked for amount to about $30,000. The city's income from taxes is about $275,000. The city's income from saloon licenses is gradually decreasing. Then in order to expend $30,000 more, it would be necessary to raise this amount by taxation, which would mean increasing our taxes over 10 per cent. I do not believe this is an opportune time to raise salaries of city employes. None of our factories or other corporations, such as the street car company, are raising salaries. In fact, some of our largest factories have laid off over half of their force and of those who are working many are putting in short hours, such as four days a week and eiprht hours a day, and manv have had their wares de

creased from 2.'c per hojr to IT l-2c per hour. I.,ast winter the city paid out several thousand dollars to needy men out of work for doing work which it was nor necessary to do at that time. 1 thoroughly approved of helping out these citizens, and If It is necessary to help them out next winter, I would approve doing so. I am not opposed to givintr the police officers and firemen a raise in salary when business conditions improve and when other institutions begin increasing wages. I believe that salaries for firemen and policemen are somewhat less in South Bend than many other cities. I believe it will be soon enough to raise their salaries when it can be done without raisins? taxes or Impairing the efficiency of other departments. It is unfortunate for the firemen that the policemen isked for a raise Just at this time. However. I do believe that our policewoman is underpaid. When the o:!ice was created, it was somewhat of an experiment and the salary was fixed at $30 per month. Her work has now proven a success and she should be paid accordingly. I believe her salary is not in proportion to salary paid policemen- whic'n is $73 per month for patrolmen and more for higher officers. She should have $00 per month. I am opposed to making a cencrai raise at this time and hope the city council and other city officials will turn it down for the present. A TAXPAYEK.

GALAXY OF GRINS Substituting for the Melting Pot

xi:w discovfuy. A barber at Seneca. 111., "got religion" at a revival there and confessed that he had turned a young man's hair fiery red with some "sea foam" of his ovii concoction. The youth had to leave town for a vear. he paid. Of late the barber has not been able to sleep because his conscience troubled him. A barber with a conscience! IlaLs!

THOUHLi: AIIKAI). The person popularly known as the head of the house turned his key in the door and entered as quietly as possible. "Where's your mo' her?" he whispeerd as his voung son appeared. "Sh!" cautioned the boy. "She's waiting upstairs in the war zone.and I think she's got vour range." N. Y". World. IHISPIIKATK. Little Charlotte accompanied her mother to the home of an acquaintance, where a dinner-dance was being riven. When the dessert course was reached, the littlo alrl was given a place next to her mother at the table. The hostess was a woman much given to talking, and. In relating some interesting incidents, quite forgot to give little Charlotte anything to eat. After some time had elapsed, Charlotto could bear it no longer. With sobs rising in her throat, she held up her plate as high as tne could and said: "Does anybody want a clean plate?"

XOT SO EASY. "What was all dem gwines-on at yo residence yistc'd'y evenln. Brudder Mooch? Sounded like a fight uhtwlxt a camp mcctin and a catamount!" "Dat? Aw, ,shuks, sah! Dat was on'y de gen'leman from de furniture gtallmcnt sto', c'lectin his easy payments." Judge.

HAILKOAI) AMEXrril. "Heah. conductor!" yelled the passenger on tho Southern train; "that was my station, suh! Why didn't yuh stop theah. suh?" "We don't sto- there no more," said the conductor. "The engineer's mad at the station agent." Railroad Engineering.

XO JOKE. When Orosco Jumped his bail. Uncle Sam knew just Huerta look for trouble.

HIS WAV. Friend: Say .Clarence, how does yo' manage to shave a genncrman what's got de St. Vitus' dance? Barber: Hoh! Dat's easy! I jc.sS holds de razzah on his face and lots him fiddle his whiskers off to suit hisself. Puck.

WILLIE WAS UGHTING. "Johnny ,how did you hjrt your hand? I hope you haven't been fighting again " "Willie Jones called me a liar, mother, an then he hit me on the fist with his teeth." Life.

THE CAUSE. Old lady (having run upon a street fight) Dear, dear! Can you tell me what's coing on up there, my man? Non-combatant Ho. nuffink, mum only the bloke wot works the steam roller wants us coves to call 'im a chauffeur. Passing Show.

iuttwi:i:n two niux "I educated one of my boys to be a doctor and the other a lawyer," said Farmer Corntossel, as he shifted his crutch. "You should be very proud of them." answered his visitor. "That seems like an excellent arrangement." "I don't know about that," replied the aged agriculturalist; "it looks as though it was a-going to break up the family. I pot run into by a locomotive, and one of 'em wants to cure me and the other one wants me go lame fo he can sue for damages." Law-Notes.

A WORTHY PLAN". "John," whispered the wife, "there must bo a burglar downstairs. He has Just knocked uainst the piano and hit several keys." "I'll go down,'- said John promptly. "Oh John." she begged, don't do anything rash!" "Bash?" said John in surprise; "I'm going to help him. He can't get that piano out of the house alone." Ladies' Home Journal.

WISEXESS. One day two laborers were discussing the wlsenesfl of the present generation. Said one: "We be wiser than our fathers wa?, and they was wiser than their fathers was." The second one, after pondering a while and gazing at his companion, replied: "Well, Garge, what a I'ule thy grandfather must 'a been!"

WHAT THE PAPERS SAY

KU11AL CHI -I) ITS. (Peoria, 111., Star.) The Woodruff Trust Co. of Jolict 111., has been making a specialty In tho last few years of a system of credits to farmers. This bank was organized along the line of the celebrated Credit Fonder of France, which produced such remarkable reeults among the farmers of France. In an address delivered before the Texas Bankers association recently by George Woodruff, told some of the experiences gained in three years. Under the European system also used in Jolict, mortgage banks are permitted to organize from which farmers can make loans for long periods of years on the amortization loan, the loans to be paid back to tho bank by making small annual or semiannual payments. Such a loan is not renewed, but continues to run until tho semi-annual payments have cleared tho farm of debt. Consequently the farmer saves all renewal commissions and tho attended expense of bringing down his abstract and having it examined every few years. Furthermore, ho is relieved of all anxiety as to whether he will be able to successfully negotiate renewals. In other words, a farmer will be able to borrow say $1,000 for 20 years, with the privilege of paying it off at intervals and at a reasonable rate of interest, eay six per cent. By paying $4 3.26 semi-annually for 20 years the farmer hao completely wiped out his debt and has been subjected to very little inconvenience in doing so. The play appears to bo an excellent one. THE REAL ISSUE. (Tho Nation.) William Allen White's reply to Mr. Mcllarg's appeal for a union of the progressives with the republicans makes what Horace Greeley was accustomed to call "mighty lnterestln' reading." And what makes it so interestine is not so much the snap that Mr. White puts into his writing, but the practical conclusion that it naturally suggests. '.'Our real issue is to beat "the democrats," says Mr. MrHarg; and substantially that is all ho says, though he backs up his appeal with a quotation from Lincoln, whoso only relevance is that the words "the real issue" occur in it. Mr. White, however, has no use for this issue; he absolutely refuses to acknowledge that "the chief end of man is to lick the democrats and enjoy their offices forever." He does admit that two million or more of the progressives have pone back to the republican fold; but these were the men who didn't really know why they were -,, r. rrcal vr TllO otbpr tAVO million.

i who stood by the colors last autumn.

did know. They will stay away, says Mr. White; there Is nothing whatever in the republican party as at present constituted that appeals to them, and they "don't care whether the republicans whip the democrats or the democrats whip the republicans in 1916."

tree. An overladen tree is generally mangled by the breaking of limbs and Its vigor i3 sometimes so depleted that it skips a year to recuperate. The runty peach does not even make good Dies. Going over an orchard and picking 2 00 peaches from each tree when the fruit is only the size of an almond is a tedious job. But otherwise in many orchards, there will be a turn-out of runty peaches at skipping time.

THE QUALITY PEACH. (Baltimore American.) According to reports coming from the peach regions of western Maryland, somo of the growers have been thinning the fruit on the overloaded trees, the purpose beins: to develop the remaining fruit in size and quality. This is a wise thing to do; troublesome but well worth the trouble. ,. When the thinning out process is boKun there should be no scrimping. If only 100 peaches are left to n tree, unless the tree is unusually large and vigorous, the crop upon the whole will bring better returns than from a yield of 500 peaches to the tree. It is no uncommon thing for peach trees to be so overloaded that the fruit is stunted in size and inferior in quality. When a poach that ought to be us big as a small cocoanut ripens rt tho size cf an English walnut there : miscarriage in the fruit-u'rowing business that spells loss to the orchard:.-!. In a full fruit year inferior peaches will not pay frelghtace. Thinnintr our thn fruit a month before

J ripening time will not only improve i the quality of the fruit but Kive the

Till: SIIYMAX'S ACT. (Wheeling Register.) The LaFollette bill, or the so-called Seaman's act, is causing thlti country a good deal of trouble. It has involved us with about 2 0 other nations, and is causing a lot of worry among the diip owners, but it is generally believed we shall get along under tho measure until congress can amend it or repeal it, to suit the requirements of shipping'. The bill was passed in the interest of the seamen. It was believed that something should be done for this class of men, who are largely without friends. So Sen. LaFollette introduced a bill, which bears his name, and it became a law of this country. The law provides that a sailor upon any ship in an American port may demand half of the waxes due him at any time he desires; that a majority of the crew of a foreign vessel shall be able to speak and understand the language of the commanding officer; that foreign sailors may not be arrested in this country for desertion; that veteran sailors must man each life boat set alloat; that the ship owners may not make advances of wages to sailors in order to hold them in the service, and otherwise the law looks after the interests of the seaman. American ship owners claim that the law works a hardship upon them and that it is practically impossible for them to operate their ships and live up to the law. But that 13 not the most serious feature of the act. The fact is that if we enforce the law so far as foreign nations are concerned, we shall violate at least 20 treaties which we have with countries upon the subject. So when the law became C'perative tho other day the government at Washington had to abrogate certain paragraphs of these treaties by requesting the several countries to consider such sections null and void. And right there arose another complication. As a rule a nation does not abrogate one clause of a treaty without abrogating all of it. So it remains to be seen whether these nations will acquiesce in considering a J.ection or two of a treaty which they made in good faith, as null and void, or whether they w ill insist that the whole treaty must be thrown overboard. If they should take this latter position it will present a troublesome matter, for it would leave us without treaties upon other important subjects, with several important nations.

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