South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 6, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 6 January 1916 — Page 6

TIII'HMIW. JAMWItV B, 191.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning livening Sunday. JOHN HKNKV ZL'VKK. Kdltur. W. llfiV.l:ii I.o.NGI.LY. IKVIN S IoLK. C'lr ulafioit Man.tger AaTrt!lr, Manzr. C. N. PASSLTT. HuhIum Maimer.

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all At tl) office or f r l;Iiori- uttovr tin rubers .ind mk for deinirtirieuf wrtI -IMlfrlnl. Advertising. Clr'ulJtb.n. r -A-eouutlnjr. For "want X'lv " If ynjr üaoie J la the t-I-pb-.ne directory, bill win be mabed after tnert1n. Kej.ort Ini tten ! lirn to 1 n Id dad execution. jnor l-lirr.r of pnper. I31 te!-p!i-n nerri h. ho , f,, i.jl (,f iepnrtineut with Mi h tom ,-ire dealing. Ti' New -Time ha tMrteen tn!?ik Hu- till cf wl,i L respond to Home Prione 11.11 and Hell -J loo. Ml Il-fKipTION KATK.s, Morn in and Kieninsr F.dltiorn, H'igle Copy 'Je; Sunday. .V : .f.rnlnvr or Kvening JMItlo:i. in.lljr. Jni-ludlne Sim-lay. ! nuilr. -'.( ot jrar in .olvaii'-e; I vert-fl by carrier In South r.eiäl nul MNiuwula. $.".11) per Jear In adrne, or by the week.

A I V K K T I M N f ; ICA Tt: Ak th- advfrtisin? depn rime nt. Fon-ipn AlTfrti:u? IleprefeiitatWe : rn.NE. LOULN.KN V ViHhMAN. Fifth Av.. New York lty an. I A.lv. 1:1.!.. "oi-aijo. Tb Nw-'riui "ndtrorn to Xep It adTertlstr. column free from fraudulent ml-repreput tin. Any person lefranded through patronage of un.v advertisement " in thin pap-r will confer a favor on the management by report lug the facts completely.

DAILY CIRCULATION ALWAYS IN EXCESS OF 15,000. SUNDAY 18,000. BOOKS OPEN TO ADVERTISERS. JANUARY 6. 1916.

THE STEVENS AND AYRES BILLS TO PROTECT STANDARD PRICES. When Rep. Steven of New Hampshire submitted a bill in the last congress prohibiting retailers from cutting price on standard articles, the bill was buried in committees. There was little public support for it. Rut so rapidly has public opinion developed along this line that there is a good prospect of a similar measure introduced by Rep. Ayres of Kansas, and more carefully framed, being enacted by the present congress. The public shied at first at the idea of letting manufacturers dictate the price at which their product should be retailed. The plan savored of monopoly. There was that peril in it, of course. It has been removed by a provision in the new bill forbidding manufacturers to fx prices if they are really in position to control the market, through monopoly of any particular product, or through agreement or combination .with other manufacturers. The manufacturer can set prices only when he is genuinely competing. The Justice of protecting the manufacturers right under certain conditions is obvious enough. A business firm that builds up a reputation for a standard article by costly and honest advertising and by maintaining the quality of its product has a right to protection against destructive cheapening of that product. It is not fair to the manufacturer for the retailer to sell his product at or below wholesale cost, merely as a bait to draw patron to the store. Such methods lead consumers to auspeet the product of being inferior, and make them unwilling to pay the regular price, which price may bo necessary to maintain the quality of the article. Small retailers, too. suffer im such methods, because they are improperly deprived of trade. The consumer suffers also. It is to his advantage to know what he is getting, and what it is worth. He is better protected by competition in quality between similar good.- sold by rival manufacturers than he is by competitive price-cutting on any particular article. Ar.d when he has profited by special low rates on any standard product, the intelligent purchaser is likely to lind later to his cost that he can no longer buy that product in his neighborhood, because the price-cutting has enabled an inferior substitute to drive it out. From the standpoint of the manufacturer and merchant it's a question of fair competition. From the standpoint of the consumer it's a question of knowing what he's buying and buying what he wants. From any standpoint it's n question of honest business.

endowments, tells the Pan-American .Scientific congress a truth that will startl nobody, when he says that the Friited States i the only big Fan-American power and that without it a league of American neutrals would be useless. As sure as shooting, some of our peace folks are goinK to get us into dilti ulty, if we don't watch out. Some of them ire o anxious to establish reputations for peaceful res., or so anxious to hog the trade of the little America) that they are plunging straight into "entangling alliances. " .ome of the little Americas m;iv be pitched upon, after Kurope gets through with her home troubles, and it is all rinht in us to feel kindly toward our little brothers of this western hemisphere, but we must not blind ourselves to the fact that we are the only power among the Pan-Americas that can do anything to combat aggression from Kurope. We're not only the only big Fan-American power but we're the fellow who will have to carry practically all of the burden. Heretofore, we've succeeded pretty well in maintaining respect for our .Monroe doctrine. Hut, after this war. Kurope is going to be very disrespectful of other folks' territory. An appetite for raw meat is not likely to be cut out all of a sudden. Through sentiment or trade considerations. Uncle am can easily "entangle" himself very seriously.

INDIANA'S FREEDOM FROM DEBT AND THE G. O. P. CAPACITY TO COVERN. Indiana free from debt a splendid record for Gov. Samuel M. Iialston's administration is the report handed out fro n the state capital. This is not democratic dope, bui a legitimate Associated Fres dispatch an item cf legitimate news. When Gov. Marshall assumed the reins of state government, talking it over from Gov. Hanly, republican, there was a floating debt contracted by the republicans in the piying of state current bills and the salaries of an army of employes, amounting to over a million dollars. There were alo several hundred thousand of Indiana and Yincennes univi rsity bonds contracted hy the republicans. Today this lloating debt is wiped out. and with it the bonded debt, though the $14 4.000 still due the Indiana university need not to have been paid until 19S7, and the $ 120,3 4 s Yincennes university bonds not until next April. And yet Charles Warren Fairbanks, republican candidate for the nomination for the presidency, once vice president of the United States, and ome time diver into frog-ponds to rescue some girl, told us the other night in a political nUhtmare that he had at Indianapolis, that the republicans alone have the capacity to govern. Perhaps jes, but we opine that Indiana has had quite enough of that capacity to govern that marked the indebtedness contracted by Gov. Hanly and his republican predecessors, for the democrats to pay off. The sinking fund wax used by the republicans to pay the state' running expenses, thus providing what was in effect a levy of 1- cents to the state general fund and still bonds had to be issued. Gov. Ualston and his ot'icial associates have used a levy of only .seven, pay running expenses, ami retire republican debts in the barK'ain. Evidently the democrats are needed in power, at least occasionally, to keep the republicans from running the state into bankruptcy. The only outstanding bonds now extant are the Furdue university permanent endowment bonds, amounting to $340,000. which are akin to -no bonds at all. They are of the nature of a school fund given the ttate by the federal government, and cannot be paid, because, for Pome reason, there is no one to whom to pay. As Atty. Gen. Mutesenburg puts it. the issue is of the nature of a common school fund, rather than a debt, and must be preserved by the state as a sacred fund for the purpose provided by the act of congress that gave it being. Still we suppose the republican, a la Charles Warren Fairbanks, will go on gloating oer some self-asserted superior capacity to gowrn; this on the presumption, we further suppose, that now. as in the day of p. T. Iiarnuni. the "Atnencan people like to be humbiuged." and per hap that they nut only like to be. hut that th-y positiv',- iivist upon it.

DON'T WORRY ABOUT US, JOHN! WE'RE HARMLESS. Certain British statesmen are having severe nightmare through fear of "the awakening of the United .States to naval power". They are in terror lest a U. navy as good as the best of them will mean world calamity, especially British calamity. Put. l.ord bless them! the British has less to fear than all other nation from Uncle Saul's preparedness, although the Britishers fears come naturally enough. Great Britain has been so long engaged as bully of the seas and so frequently engaged in acquiring territory that she cannot conceive of a nation having power to do these things and not using it. If the plans for preparedness included any designs upon BritLsh interests, preparation to seize Canada would be conspicuous therein. There's no more thought or talk of doing such a thing than there is of Ohio's raiding Pennsylvania. Any navy the Uifited States may build will only mean to Uncle .Sam a larger respect upon the seas; something he does not now enjoy, as Britain is demonstrating. It does not take much study of history to disclose the fact that, while Britain acquires territory by force of arms. Uncle .Sam buys it, when he wants it, as a rule. Uncle is such a good buyer, that it's much cheaper to buy than to fight, and this fact increases in force as his money-bags grow.

WE MIGHT TRADE THEM OFF. Hon. C. m Sherrill, former U. S. minister to Argentina, presents some views in respect of the Philippines that tiound mighty good. He advises Uncle Sam to adopt, in relation to the Orient, the policy ."Stay-at-home-and-mind-your-own-business". The whole world, especially the Japanese part of it, is justified In questionining our sincerity and honesty when we draw our Monroe doctrine around Central and .outh America and yet go over to Asia and acquire territory there. Mr. herrill would trade our Philippines for all Kuropean possessions to the south of us, turn the Guinas and British Honduras Into free republics, and take under the U. S. flag the West Indian islands, which are so Important to the defense of the Panama canal. Certain It is that if we hang on to the Philippines we're in danger of trouble. If wc linally grant them independence the other alternative of which is Imperialism we are bound to protect them in their independence, which would be tretching the Monroe doctrine more than it would stand and cost a hundred times more than the islands are worth to anybody. Trading Is the Yankees' best holt, as any nation that has had deals with us will testify, and we are a long, long ways from preparedness to compete on the Pacific, either commercially or martially.

FOUND A NEW ONE. "Petromortis". Get it? Tt explains the sudden, mysterious deaths of two New Yorkers und a Chicago lawyer, named Humphrey. It is death from automobile gas fumes, and the doctors are issuing warning' about it because they don't fully understand it and you die before being able to run up much of a doctor's bill. The deadly fume are "splitting products" of benzine which ''products" are so new to science that they haven't yet been named. In the open air you can take a whiff or two of these fumes without danger. Take them In a closed garage, and you die almost instants. They found lawyer Humphrey dead, on his back on the floor of his garage, with his auto engine running. However, this being the license. and tax-paying time for autos. maybe the discovery of "petromortis" won't alarm you hardly any.

IS IT EVOLUTION, OR WHAT? Lloyd-George, long-time champion of the masses and as near a union, workman as a fellow can be and not actually carry a hod or wield a hammer, begs the British labor unions to save the country, by permitting women to work in the war munitions shops. The British lion is down on his l:nees begging labor

I unions to "permit women to work!" One way or anI other, it is a demonstration such as this world has

never before seen. The kaiser lias started things that no power on earth can stop, among- other things the demonstration that the people and nut royalty have the power. Oovern-

j ments are going to lie born anew, and "with the con- ! sent of the governed."

THE WONDER. Madam Bernhardt ridicules the idea of being seriously ill. and adds that she is "perfectly well, and without a care or a wrinkle." No wonder the French soldier. cannot he conquered when even the women of France jest at the grim reaper. Hernhardt has suffered the loss of a limb, lingered at death's door as a result of the operation, and is declared, by at least one attendant physician. to be suffering from an incurable malady, yet she smiles and jokes and is "well and happy", he' the wonder of womanhood.

IT S DIFFERENT. Br. Francis Ponna of Philadelphia ha married a woman who is out on parole from a lunatic asylum. It is a blow to eugenics at its very roots. Will the doctors who favored death in the Bollinger baby case get together and prevent this couple producing more "hopeless" babies? Will they jump Dr. Donna for being unethical? They will not.

PAN-AMERICAN 'ENTANGLEMENT FROL'GHT WITH DANGER. Vr. James L'ru'wn ScuU, secretary uf Carucsie's peace

The total wealth of the great state of Texas is placed at $:7i7.u;o.J73 for 19U. Upon Jan. 1, Germany and Great Britain will have squandered $20.0oö.0üü.00ü on the war. In other words the equivalent of seven vast and rich empires like Texas wiped from the face of the earth! Staggering figures, eh?

The Velvet Hammer

Bv Arthur Brooks Baker

RALPH W. GAYLOR. Tin town of .MMiawaka Im- a weight iqwui its mind. And noctis tin finest major it i possible (o find. It always tries to sot a gcxxl example to South Bend, Which e can rightly follow and which others can commend. lis conduct of affairs must Im refine! and dignified. A projKT hasls for the talled kind of chic pride. The name of .Major (.a) lor is a strict eertiticate That Mishawaka's morals are all upright, pure and straight. He knoeks the merry grafters resolutely on the wrist. And says in tones serene and firm that sinners must desist; The greedy ooriiorat Ions of the public sen lew sort He v liases up the alley for his exercise and sMrt. The climate down at Washington would suit his lungs und heart. And lie ."oiild run for congress if he ever got a start. Though Andrew Jackson Ilickey lias it cut and dried and done That lie himself will Im there when they start that sort of fun. And Andrew daekson did it once with dust-dlsturblng speed. Though not with all the haste that the (Kxasion seemed to need. But (iajlor's the mechanic who has built the fine machine On which the 1iojks of Mishawaka's Grand Old Party lean. And many gay eomHtltors who thought the game was cinched Have tried to monkey with the wheels and sot their lingers pinched. So if the (.rand Old Party should sufficiently revive. Who knows but he'll be congressman and help its fortunes thrive?

WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS

A WAlt CARTOON. (Pittsburgh Press.) A cartoon published in one of the magazines represents a young soldier standing beside a newly made mound on which there is a cross. The roughly made cross marks the resting place of "only another" killed in battle. And the sorrowing comrade who stands near is probably wondering "Is it worth while V He is thinking-, ay he stands near, not only of the departed comrade, but of a mother miles and miles away perhaps right now scanning through her silver-rimmed spectacles the long casualty lists. Her eyes as tired as her hair is gray, refuse to he moved until with aching heart for others and a gasp of relief for herself, she has read the last name and her boy's is not there! But in a few more days she will know how could she have expected otherwise that it has happened anc then! She will soon join him in the great beyond. Perhaps the young soldier near tho cross is wondering how long it will be until another eruy haired mother will know, too. But soon his revery must end. Soon his thoughts must turn from home, friends and loved ones. Unseen tears will vanish. He must turn axrain to the business of war of the slaughter of an unkown. nnsees foe. Soon he Is again in the thick of battle. Shrapnel bursts on all sides. There is a desperate charge from the trenches. Shells whiz by, and more tomrades fall. With a demonish fire in his eyes he hurls grenades with curses and presses the point of his bayonet into the breast of some other mother's boy. Whose? It matters little! The man who stood in tears at the grave of his comrade a few hours before is not the si'.me man. Battle gives no time for f-ymtkathy, for fear, for thought of home or love. It is wholly the business of war; the business, of murder and ruin. There will soon be many more freshly made graves; there will soon be many moe such scenes as the one pictured in tho cartoon; there will soon be more comrades who will murmur in the twilinht: "Is it worth while?"

THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

THOUGH unable to establish or prove it. by personal testimony the records ehow conclusively that the state of Indiana is 100 years old. having been, according to these records, admitted to statehood in 1 S 1 rt. Previous to that Indiana was in a nebulous state fioatinu about in the Northwest territory. The reduction of a portion of the nebulous mass was concurrent, or nearly so. with the appearance in the political arena of the Harrison family., and we understand they are still running for oilice in Chicago. IX his fight against disease the kaiser has1 the advantage of "my soldiers" in the trenches, who get their anesthetics subsequent rather than previous to the fact. TIIK Teutons claim the Russian drive sliced and landed in the rough. The Hardships of Army .Life. (Columbia City Post.) Lieutenant Fred Wunderlich, of the United States army, who is stationed at the Jefferson Barracks, near St. LouLs, Mo., writes friends in this city that he is now nicely located in the officer's home near the Mississippi river. He is a dentist and likes his work fine and is allowed to do outside work in connection with the work that is required of him by the government. He has short office hours and this gives him plenty of time to see the -sights which are of great interest- to him. "AT our house," writes G. II. K "we have determined in advance what we will do if we have a burglar. v We will give him the freedom of the house and Invite him to help himself, and when he departs we will wish him a Happy New Year. In our opinion there is nothing too good for a burglar who has the drop on us." TUB starting of a Christmas savings fund, we opine, should not be delayed lest the enthusiasm due to

I tilling down last year's stake should yield to apathy and indifference. I'ph. Dniley Should Secure Her for Our Next niir. (Ionia. Mich., Standard.) -Mrs. John Hseh received a record price for the blooded cattle she shipped from this point last week. It will be remembered that Mr?. Usch took the first prize at the fair last fall for the finest calves exhibited at that time. OLD Bill Dunkle says our story of George Ar.'iss' instantaneous love affair was the funniest thing in the Pot yesterday, hut he wonders what Mrs. Arliss w;ll think about it. THF trouble with some young reople is that they want to do some thing big at the start. They want to burst into the firmament like a new comet with a tail 17 million mile.-? long. They forget that only a short time ago they had to creep before they could toddle and toddle before they could walk, and they haven't learned that in this world things come on tho installment plan, nor do they know there are a lot of gray haired people who started out with as much ambition as they have and haven't done a big thing yet. "ST. PAT HICK was an Italian." Knrico Caruso. He means St. Patrick was an Ovtalien; The Best Christmas Card. (From a Metal Manufacturer.) Let us hop? that the sunshine of 191fi will dispel the cloud of misery which now enshrouds our brothers across the sea, and that we will enjoy again and forever PEACE ON KAI ITH GOOD WILL TOWARD MEN. GOOD will is the biggest asset the world can have. IT convert- spears into pruning hooks and swords into ploughshares. C. X. F.

constitutional. It is getting so that most reformatory legislation skates the margin of illegality if it doesn't actually break through. But there should be a law against slaughtering calves, simply because the business is so enormous it is decimating the cattle herds of the country at an alarming rapidity. The business has all the effect an embargo on reproduction would have. The gentleman from Illinois says in five years beefsteak will cost as much as terrapin or pheasant, and will be seen only on the tables of the millionaires. We shouldn't wonder. Eight to ten million calves cannot be killed every year, and yet have no effect on the price of beef.

AS TO FACT AND FICTION. (Nashville Tennesseean. ) It may not be exactly true, as has po long been said, that "fact is stranger than fiction.' but there comes proof every once in a while that fact is certainly quite as strange as fiction. There was printed in the I apers rec ently a dispatch from eastern Maryland telling of a man having kept his daughter a prisoner for eleven years in n small, dark room, until she lost the power of speech, and almost of thought. If anyone had been asked before the publication of that dispatch to find an incident of that kind, he would have made his search among the horror novels of fifty years ago rather than in a farmhouse of thQ present day in a highly civili.wd and humane state.

KODAK FINISHING We give the best service consistent with Good Results Your films will get the careful attention of an expert if you bring them here. A complete Drug line. Hans Drug Store 123 W. Jefferson Blvd. Opposite Post Office

Some truth in regard to conditions in Germany i3 disclosed by instructions to the American ambassadors at !ndon and Paris to secure safe passage for American euudenseU milk Xor starving babies in Germany.

IWPF.K ntOM GUASS. (Ogden. Utah, Examiner.) The department of agriculture has been experimenting on making paper from grass. This grass grows on tha Pacific slope and in western Mexico. So far the results cf the trials have hc-en very aood. TWe jper is a firstgrade, machine-finished printing paper, satisfactory In appearance and feel in--'. The priK-ess is a simpler one than makinar paper from wool pidp. one operation beinj? omitted. It takes a little more bleaching powder than poplar stock does. If w ire, grass is used for paper making on a large scale it will mean a bi;c help in forest conservation. At present wood in the United States is being used about three times as fast as it grows. The demand increases constantly. If we are to keep our production and consumption of wood balanced, which is the aim of good forestry, substitutes for vood are needed in order to let production catch up with the demand. The use of wire grass in paper manufacture would not only save a vast amount of wood P'alp each year, but by so doing would assist in keeping clown the price of paper.

iiLFi: i;yi:s. O'leveland Press.) A favorite theme of certain w riters is eye s. These writers tell us that the really big men of the world havo all had blue eyes. Now, while we are not so silly as

to imagine that the mental caliber of : man is determined by the color of his' eyes, we offer to those born wthj brown or dark eyes this information: Abraham Lincoln. Julius Caesar,'

Robert Iouis Stevenson. James A. Garfield. McKinley, Pitt, Wordsworth. Harvey (the discoxerer of blood circulation) Goethe, pope Keo XIII, Beethoven, Raphael, Dante and manv more men famous for bit; things, had dark or brown eyes.

Insure Your Future It is a great thing to measure up to the satisfaction of your friends, but far better to have the approval of your own conscience. Have you taken the precaution, that will protect your future, by starting a savings account with this bank? Why side-step anything so important? See us aboii t our plan ut once. American Trust Company I Per Cent On Sating.

Try News-Times Want Ads

SAY V. T1IK CALYFS. (Toledo Blade.) An Illinois representative has introduced a bill making it a felony to ship calves from state to state for purpose of slaughter. Possibly such a law would be un-

.. S S i ; L

Gome and

See It Work

What ever you want in the Electrical line call at 1 2 1 W. Colfax Av. and have it demonstrated. We do not sell we demonstrate. I. & M. is not in the dealer field we do not sell appliances and home equipment but we do want to help you determine which percolater or washing machine or stove is best suited to your needs. This is our idea of service service first.

121 W. Colfax Av.

o

I. & M. stands for Indiana & Michigan Electric Co.

Wm. Major's Cut Rate Cash Grocery This announcement to the public is for the purpose of showing that this store is prepared to, and will oiler for sale groceries at prices that should attract all who have to buy. Beginning with January 1, 19 16, we will SELL FOR CASH ONLY and by so doing will be able to offer three day sales each week with prices which will mean big sayings. The prices below are quoted for our first three days' sale for THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY:

4 lbs. 1 1. & i:. Granulated Sugar ?. lbs. fancy Head Kice ?. lbs. Lima Means 4 lbs. Navy I i O i i 1 1 "" 1 doz. Fancy Selected Cold Storage L-'gs . . cans Riverside Peas :: cans Riverside Corn :: cans Indiana Corn '2 cans Peru County Gentlemen Cor.i ... cans Rlue Label Karo Syrup 1 can Cncle John Pure Maple Syrup - lbs-. .White Cloud Lard 1 lb. Lincoln l'.lend Coffee, Steel Cut . . . '2 packages Maple Flakes packages Kellog's Flakes 2 packages (Irappnuts :; boxes Oats, liolled c, bars of any kind Soaj

t; packages of any Powder 7 sacks Fine Table Salt 7 Hi. sack Rose I-af Flour . . . .

sacks C

Meal

lbs. of Fancy Pried Prunes 2 lbs. of Fancy Uried Prunes

25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c

25c 25c ..25c ...25c ...25c ...25c ...25c ...25c ...25c

lbs. California Seeded Raisins lbs. Iriod Apricots

...25c ...25c

': Hu- packages pould's No-'db'

Macaroni or Spaghetti 1 P. South Rend 'ream rv Rutter . . .

1 lb. American Cream Cheese: 1 lli. Rriek Ghees ! .

:l bottles Lbjuid Rlackem

Stove colish

:: bottles Polish

1 regular 1 0 Rroom . .

lb. Green Japan Gun Powder

or Lngiisii Rrcakfast Tea

25c

.:::" 25c

25c 25c

25c 35c 21c 20c

"a:?:r.25c

25c

25c

25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c

; boxes L'asy Light Mat' li'-.s boxes Kit' hc u Cleanser f, rolls Waldorf Toilet Paper .... th.z. Van y '..) nan. is ........ 1 (joz. Florida Jran ges ........ 1 dozen Lemons ........ 20 lbs. nice Head Cabbage 1 Cfjo Gahaniz'-d Pail Z cans Golden Key Milk 2 :',-oz. glasses: Irifd Reef

Z 10c loaves Sheer's OX Milk Maid Rrcad DC

2 pounds

Margari:

ine 38C

Shop by telephone if you wish. We will deliver your order to any number in the city. Prompt attention t 'phone orders. A trial order is ail we ask. Home Phone 2314. Bell Phone 2914. Wm. Major's Cut Rale Cash Grocery 418 WEST DIVISION STREET.