South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 204, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 July 1916 — Page 4

.Tl lin.XY AITPK-VOOX, jriA' 2-', lvl

irtE 5üu in DtND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NWS.TIMES

iMornin Evening Sunday. JOH.V HENRY ZLTVnn, Editor. GACniEL Ft. SUMMERS. Publisher.

om,t ..ori tfi ritE MonNFNr. rRANriur. PAPKR IN NOHTIIKKV I.NUIANA AM ONLY PAI'KK JIriOUNff TIIK INTi:ilN,VTK)NL NEW SERVICE IX SOUTH ni:XI No otliT neirr In lc täte protct1 bj two leaved wir nizbt and dij nt ttJ s; nU nlj if kt-rolumn papr In rat wutai.K .n1:aniool!. l'nfolisli"! fny daj of tb year an-.l twice a n'l ilajs excrpt Sunday ani lioildaye ratereJ at tLe Sjutli Lend ottoCuj at aecooj (Uli in iL

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY Office: 210 W. Colfax Av. fUm Thon 113L Bf 11 Phone 2100.

the middle west. Efforts have boon

male to Kt the health department to do poniethinpr to laWate the nuisance, but its answer is a demand for an 'appropriation of S 1.0 ., and there the matter hanK. 'while the weeds continue to thrie. especially, it feerr.s 'n the acant lots own'! hy members of the Real 1 Estate association, of which Major Keller if president. ! Ir. Hosenbury, city health ortker, averts that he ha. no proper authority for the extermination of weed. ! Possibly not. We can scarcely conceive of any law that i

could Rive Ir. Doenbury proper authority for anything that Mayor Keller does not want him to do, from some political, or for other reason?. Dr. l'.oxenbury probably Vunt.s the $1.000 appropriation so he can turn It back at the end of the year, and then throw out his chest and boast that he saed it. just as he turned back

j omethinj? tipward. of J2.O00 last year, and then comI plained that the reason that he did not accomp lsh more

was that he didn't have the money to do with. lie went before th council sometime ago and asked for

Call at the offl-e or telepbor .ihore numbers and aik; $2.000 fo: a housins survey, and apparently he is keep-

fer epartmont winted K-litorlal. Advertising. Circulation, or Aountlatr. Tor "want advs " !f your name la In the teleDhonf rtlrrtftrr. MM r. ninllf.,1 ftrr lin-rtlon. lleport

inattention '.o bualaas. La 1 ev'Utlon. puor delivery ct ppera. bad telephone servl.f. et-.. to bfad of department wlU wtlcb you are dealing. Tbe .Nms- l irnt u ha thirteen trwnt hnea ail at whkb. respond to limine l'hone llöl aud Hell -1W

M:nsCRIPTION RAT KS. Morn In? and HTen!n Hditlons. PlDjr: Copy. 2c; Sunday. 5o; .Morning or livening IMitla. dally. Inludlo.c Sunday, by ruaii. u) pr year lu advance. Delivered by carrier la So'Jtb l'.end aud Aliabawaka. $5 00 per jar lo advance, or by tae w-ek.

ADVERTISING RATfcS. Aak the adrerttalnc dpirtment. Fflrt-r Adrer'iBins He pres'-ntatives : COM;. LOKKNZKN & WOOiliLVN. Kith At New ork City and Adv. Hid.. Chicago. The ewa-Tiii.os endeavors to kop us advertising roiumag free fron fraudulent lal-represent ition. Any person defrauded tbroujli patronage uj auy n Jvertlat-ment lu thu paper wiil confer a favor ou tl uianaeuit-nt by retcrtl'j tü facta cotapittcly.

JULY 22, 191(.

RELAXING ARMY REQUIREMENTS.

The war lcpar t nu i:t h is iuel instructions to tho effect that in the examination of oflicers nnl enlisted

-' iL''iia i i f t i a , ,i i t nil. 11 11 dinarily are regarded a.- di'i'ialiri ations may be walveu whenever in the judmn-nt of lepartment commanders It i.s for the adantai;e of the servico. The decision is based on a number of asos in whi h re"riy valuable officers or men. skilled in some lifüciilr branch of army work, would have been rejertf.i by a strict application of the rules on ee.-iht. boarinu. etc. Minor defects, therefore, arc to be tolerated when they plainly will not interfere with lh d isrha rre f tlie soldier's duties. Now it would be uell to ro a step further and prive recruiting officers similar freedom in passing on apilicants for enlistment in the regular army arul nay. It i" a matter of cornmon belief that the present rules are altogether too strict, and that larj;e number of jnen now turned down would make excellent soldiers and ailors.

intr that to help swell a pretended savin? at the end of

the year. Hut to return from this official weed as it is nurtured on pasteurized milk, to the milk-weed, the ragweed, yellow dock, cockle burr, the "careless weed," and th common daisy; the ones that the Hay Fever association most pointedly condemns in its propaganda work. It is opposed to weeds, on general principles as every civilized human beins oup;ht to be. because agriculture, and in a broad sense civilization itself, is one eternal struggle agaiot weeds, but the hay-fever-ites are naturally most concerned with the plants whose pollen, carelessly permitted by nature to be blown into the nasal passages of susceptible men and women, is held responsible for this infliction. The latest theory regarding this baffling ailment is that each sufferer owes his malady to some particular plant that there are about as many kinds of hay fever

las there are pollen-bearing weeds.

The H. l A. propaganda ought to be taken more

seriously than it is. I'ortunately the number of hay

H'ei suiijfcis i." it inaiiu i rnian jmi t wi nc iypunition; but if their advice were followed, and the extermination of weeds were vigorously prosecuted, there would be an immense benefit to the entire community. It is possible that if this matter were taken tip in earnest, the whole country might, within a few years, be virtually cleared of weeds, to the immense relief of agriculture and the great increase and cheapening of the food supply. Of course, this suggestion will be greeted with incredulity by most persons. Weeds are generally accepted as an inevitable affliction, to be eliminated, no doubt, from any particular plot of ground for a brief time luhard and persistent effort, but not to be got rid of generally or permanently. Rut it has never been tried? Why not try it? Of course, in outh Bend, especially, "there's a reason," and a very effective one.

"UOSfM HUGHES AND INDIANA. Evidently, if e rruy take the republican organs seriUsly and when it comes to admissions relative to the conduct of their own part we certainly should then the g. o. p. has a new boss. It is Mr. Chatles Evans Hughes, late of Washington, 1. ., hut now of Clens Falls. X. Y. Accordingly we have it that Ross" Hughes ha put his foot down and told the republican factions that they must pet together and stop hinting, this in the Interest of success ' to hades," we suppose, with the consequences of that success. What "Ross" Hughes wants now, i"ite apparently, is

NATURE AND WE. Terrific heat in Mesopotamia halts fighting. Russians withdraw lo coolness of hills; torrential rains on Somme held up allied offensive: earthquakes rock Italian provinces, terrified population flees; mist and darkness end North sea battle. These are a few of the items that the cables bring us from the battlefields of the great war. How strikingly they illustrate the puniness and ineffectiveness of man when confronted with the majestic forces of nature! For two years the war correspondents have exhausted the superlatives of the language to tell us of

to be elected president. Such little dufercne es of princi- the destruction wrought by man-made instruments of pie as are involved in the purposes of the once pro-U'ar. Then the clouds pather and the rain falls, old gressive patty and in the past history and "stand-pat" Mother Earth stirs in her sleep, the sun rises in the

future of the republicans, are to him of no account in comparison with the necessity of everx body netting be-

heavens and pours his impalpable rays on the shouting slayers, and behold, the thunder of the guns dwindles

' . -.1 A t ! 1

bind him in his campaign. And so he has placed a j ' nothingness, t he vaunts of me conqueror ancune w an number of ex-progressives on his c ampaign committee, (f the conquered fade into silence, and all man's fury .-.ml he has told ,he "stand-patters" to shut their aps. j becomes as the cry of a frightened child in the darkwhich they can well afford to do A campaign, at least ness. semi-managed by ex-proressives. may be essential to j ur breath halts and our pulses quicken as we read winning the progressive vote, but it is not saying by of the horror and devastation of the battlefield, the piles any means that it would assure a progressive admin-Iof unburied corpses polluting the air, the ashes of

itratton should "Ross" Hushes prove victorious when the votes are .ounted. Why then should the "standpatters" worry ? Take Indiana for an example. Wh.it harm could "Ross" Hughes as president do to the "stand-pat" principles of the old guard with a congress of men like those which the republicans propose to elect from Indiana and the like of Charles Warren Fairbanks, something of a "boss" himself, presiding over the upper houe? We wouldn't be surprised, from reading the speeches and comment on the subject at the state pro-

towns and villages cumbering the ripped and lacerated earth, noble cathedrals crumbling to ruins, majestic forests blasted by the lightning of the Riins. mighty rivers running red with blood. Yet in a few months nature can obliterate these blemishes, wipe away these scars as though they had not been, clothe with beauty the blood-sodden trenches and the grim burial mound, send pure and health-giving air through forests restored to their primeval grandeur. There must be many a reflective soul among the millions on the embattled lines of Europe w ho, as he lies

gressive convention in Indianapolis. Thursday, that the j " nis tret en at mgnt ami gazes up ai me immemuiwi. Indiana progressives are not to be buncoed bv tlie ! ars. must think with pitying contempt of man's little

proces. The state ticket put up by the party, and the refusal to discuss national issues mi the state platform, leaving the individual progressives independent to vote ys they please for president, indicates that while those who wish to swalbnv the Hughes buncombe as to himself may do so, it i-: not intended to throw any Watsons and News and Hu kevs m the way of his being

fretful furies. We can only be impressive when we contemplate ourselves alone. When we contemplate the heavens above or the earth below we realize our insignificance.

WIRELESS JOBS LOR BLIND SOLDIERS. It i an established fact that tho blind far excel in

progressiv e, should he want to be. ami urts the chance. act teness of hearing and sensitiv encs of touch their Which was a very sensible co irse for the ,i ogressiv es j f el'ovv men who have unimpaired sight. Thy French, to pursue; and the more sensible because, th' state ton-'with their usual forethought, have taken this into convention having refused to indorse T.. . Hughes, or ! sidei atien in planning for occupations for French sol-b.r.-er to retain on the national progressive committee ! diers after the war. French scientists, after c areful ina man who at Cheat:., voted to w re "k the catty in t he v est i-ation. have decided that blind soldiers will make "boss"" favor, they tealicd that their brst duty was l the best vv ireless epe rators. to Indiana, and to making it po.-ihle for a republican! The qualities most needed by a wireless operator are

president, should there ever be another one. to be as de ntly progressive as po-i' !e. The convention even refused to be fcumhiiseed by such sago advice as came from the once honorable Alhert J reiuiah Revrbe. Indian.!, progressives sec t tied front "bossism" when they

highly developed faculties n" touch and hearing. In most cases, people who have been rendered blind not only retain those two faculties intact, but develop them to a remarkable decree of acuteness and sensitiv er.ess. Another valuable serv ice which th French, scientists

ocit the republican tarty in IM:': that is, they t bought j believe the Mind sokliers could render especially well is they did until th y four.d that the once honorable t'ol.Jthat of sound detectors on shipboard durng a fog. T. Roosevelt thought himself another "t-oss" " in 1916. Where a man with unimpaired sipht is at a loss to loNovv that thev should take on "Ro-s" Huuhes. evenjeate the vessels whose fog horn he hears in the darkthouh. like Mr. Roosevelt, he pretend" so nicely to be ness, a Mind man with sharpened hearing could locate their "boss' for their own uood. n;" ural';. has failed jit absolutely. to make a hit. ! In opening these positions to her blind soldiers. In other word, r se n.- :h.,: there ;.ie progressives ( France will not be performing any chaiity in the comwho decline f.. u- h . ! w i r k j hack into the republican ' mon use of that term. She will simply be fitting the partv by the faUe ptetej.se ,,f a "b.s" walloping even ;bcst man to his job. and giving the men who fought for their ancient c.en.v; ir it ti-v will de, Une the bait her their deserved opportunity. The benefit derived

tendered them by "Ro--' Hu

as it was bv "Ross"

Roo.-eve'.;. for Iii p rsr.r. tl .i d v . n-.-eme r.t . but will use t l.eir brains and cve-.ght to i!., t what lies behind the front.

will be for the public as well as the individual.

(iETTINCi RID OF THE WEEDS.

While the H.y F, er .: AeiJ pi o p.l g. I!' ! i . A e all

at ion s

with it:

"Summer furs'" are said to have been banned at some of the eastern seaside resorts, as a precaution against

!the spread of infantile paralysis. Of course they never J w ould hav e been banned merely out of deference to uomnion sense.

nti-

ut t h.t t ht ! .

,ie a lot' Prospects that Teddy ami Taft '.vdl appear on the

p op!e who ; -.(. nvw " o.i!d ! to s, , s energies : same stump for Hughes. The "a n i hi ng-to-beat-Wil-

Urv.Ud Jiftcliy ut t'uuth lkud, pcihapj cue 0f the son"' cauc ;a bure something Pi fee.

Silly Fakes" of Calamity Howlers Devoid of Truth

The "silly fakes" of republican calamity howlers are contrasted w ith the non-partisan federal reserve board's reports of stolid prosperity in the following editorial from the Philadelphia Record: On the same page of yesterdaj's ledger appear two articles which furnish an interesting contrast. One. headed "Assails Democratic Prosperity Claims." cornea from Jonathan Bourne's ridiculous and lying republican publicity association, while the other is from the conservative and non-partisan federal reserve board, giving its monthly review of business conditions throughout the country. Because the democrats are in power, Jonathan will not admit for a second that there is such a thing as enduring prosperity in the United States. Listen to his raving: "Prosperity? It ist soaked in the blood of millions of Europe's slain, and Mexico, upon whom now we war. has added her mite to it. Four billion dollars worth of exports have been sent to Europe during the twenty months of war, and thirty-one classes of those exports, indispensable in modern warfare, made up more than Z0 per cent of the total. That is democratic prosperity." Collet ruction Work lA'ads. Well, well awful, is it not? If Mr. Hughes shall be elected president he will without doubt at once order the European nations to stop fighting, so that we may have no prosperity "soaked in the blood," etc. Turning now to the statement of thi federal reserve board, we find no mention of war as the sole basis of the present great activity in business. Philadelphia, New York. Boston and Chicago all report general business as ve:y good, with especial emphasis on construction work. It will hardly be claimed, we suppose, that the erection of new stores, mills, office buildings, apartment houses, banks, and dwellings hinges upon the situation in Europe. .lonatlian's -.silly Fakes." Regarding business in New York, which may be taken as typical of the whole country, the report says: "There are reassuring signs of a noted change to a more conservative outlook on commerce, industry and banking. The unrestrained activity that was so conspicuous for a time seems to be steadying down to a safer pace. Factory orders are booked so far ahead and are still being received in such volume that manufacturing is expected to continue for many months without slackening. Industries are hampered by a scarcity of skilled and unskilled workers, but the labor situation, except on the railroads, is more settled than it was a month ago. Failures fewer than last year." You can take your choice. Jonathan's silly fakes or the sober statements of the federal reserve board. Roth agree that prosperity is here. As to the solidity of its foundations, which is the more likely to be true?

WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS

TIIK MAK1C OF LAIIOIIATOKIIIS. (Kansas City Times.) Every little while the world is startled by some discovery in the chemical laboratory that brings a new .material into use. or improves an article already in use so that wider fields are opened to it, and founds new and great industries. The discovery of celluloid is an example. A chemist began a search for a new material that would make a billiard hall as good as ivory and cheaper. By combining guncotton and camphor under great pressure he discovered celluloid. which leaped into immediate use as a substitute for ivory, hard rubber, glass, coral and n lot of other things, and a new industry was born that employs many thousands of workmen. Bakelite, an improvement on celluloid, was discovered by a chemist. It is made of a combination of carbolic acid and formaldehyde heated under pressure. Factories that employ thousands are turning it out. Rubber was so soft and sticky that it wus useless until a chemist discovered how to toughen and harden it by vulcanizing, and tho entire art of rubber working, with all its importance to the human race, came into being. Without rubber the motor car would be unprarticable. The discovery of how to harden tteel by mixinr: tungsten with it lias revolutionized the making of motor cars and other machines. Yv'ithoat this high-speed steel parts of curs would be so ponderous as to piohibit their use. In hundreds of laboratories chemists are working, testing now combinations, experimenüiis with amazing perseverance often making tens of thousands of experiments in search of one thing as was uune by the chemist who discovered takelito. So one can even surmise what will be the next great iscoveiy of these patient men of science, for the held of chemistry is as wide and deep is the oniverse: new erernents are leing" found, and combinations innumerable are possible, and any day a chen.isi who has hitherto been unknown outside hi. i.iboratory, may wave his magic wand and produce for us a newsubstance, a new source of power end light that will revolutionize industries. change transportation systems, and even enable to lift our heads to the stars.

THE MELTING POT FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

THE ALM ANAC. Kach planet of the heavens ha his duly beaten track Set forth in the romantic and instructive almanar. Each swings by card and schedule in his predetermined course, From which he can't be drawn by either flattery or force. Each has the strength of character to resolutely walk. Upon his own allotted path and chosen line of chalk. Some people have contended that we all are much the same; That we are merely pawns and not the players of the game; That somewhere there's an almanac forecasting ovcry act In details scientifically careful and exact; That every joy by which we're thrilled or grief by which we re pained Is in this dread and mystic book appointed and ordained. And who can say but this may he approximately true? YVho knows but fate has written down what he"f to think and cio? The treaties of the nations and the covenants of czars. The awful deeds of butcher slaves who work the will of Mars, The triumphs of tho lowly and the sorrows of the great "What futures are forecasted in the almanac of fite! A. B. B. o

Starvation or Villa is said to be

the alternative in Mexico. Sort of between the green ocean and the iuler of the underworld. The column writers of the country have achieved a great diplomatic victory. The skirts this fall are to be shorter. o XATTRAIJjY. After describing the new transparent bathing suit one of the big tow.i papers takes pains to say: Of course the wearer musi wear something or other underneath it if the bathes at a public beach. NOT FOR Ml-:. If a man should say, "You go to war - Or agree to wear a policeman's star." I'd say to him: "If you let me pick 1 sure won't right no harmless lunatic." o Just because you find a hair in

dish it is no sign it's rabbit

our soup.

We wonder what will be used next in that European war. The steam roller, the pinchers, the nippers and the squeezer have been used. Before long the headwriters will be compelled to fall back on their old one, the hammer. Or perhaps some correspondent will say they sawed their way through. TUE OTIIKK (;l-V. You won two bucks you say.

On a horse the ether day, But did you think. That though you won It was real f in For the other gink. VKI1V (iOOI), KDRIE. A band of poor, begging fortune telling gypsies which passed through here recently were arrested in Kalamazoo for some misdemeanor and to settle the leader drew jv check on a Chicago bank. Before accepting this the authorities 'phoned to the Chicago bank to sew if there were funds to cover and tho reply came bad: that if it amounted to $50,000. it w ould be good. Walkerton Independent. r.LAMi: thi: hi:at. If you should take a life. Or swipe a neighbor's wife, Or rob or siwear or cheat, Just smile and grin When they lock you in. And blame this summer heat. Eight occupations Picking leathers off gooseberries. The German submarine is preparing to sail. Perhaps there is nothing unusual in this but it sounds funny. "Villa," said his private secretary, "is very, very busy this afternoon. He is attending his eleventh funeral." Add to America's little worries, the British blacklist. Rock the stable, to 'ell with the horse.

marked deterioration in tho mental capacity of young people of collegestudent age since he first began to come in contact with them some 25 years ago. He said they seem unable to concentrate their minds as they used to. What they seem to learn now, he said. they acquire parrot-like. In short, they do not think, says an exchange. We asked a high school teacher of lo'ng and successful experience if this is true. She said it undoubtedly is. Both she and the college professor attribute the unpromising status of boys and girls to too much scattering of interest. There are too many different things for them to do. their attention is constantly being diverted from one thing to another and the result is that they cannot fix their minds on anything and consequently do nothing well. Not only dr they have a wide diversity of amusements. but the school curriculum itself is given over in large measure to a very wide variety of po-called studies which by the farthest stretch of the imagination cannot be considered vital or fundamental. A return to simpler courses in Fchool and to simpler living outside is needed, in the view of our college professor and our hieh school teacher.

in percentage c-f a standard as a basis for a study of the problem. Since the glare of many papers is known to have an injurious effect upon' the eyesight of readers, much has been written on the subject and societies have been formed to promote the use of unglazed papers, especially in school books.. The amount or intensity of the glare depends to a large extent upon the method of manufacture a highly calendered paper is more injurious than the soft, dull paper used by daily papers bit until now there has been no satisfactory method of measuring the intensity. This instrument has therefore aroused much interest among paper manufacturers and has been used in some of the larger mills with good results.

roii(.irrTiN; how to think. (Wyoming Tribune. Cheyenne.) A college professor made the remaik to one of his classes i-i the summer school at Ohio .-'late university the other day that h notices a

STAT I : ti:xt ROOKS. Peoria, III., Journal.) While other states have wrestled

with the free text books problem for!

many years, it has remained for Kansas, the pioneer in many advanced legislative and governmental experiments, to get down to busiress and make actual provision for supplying public school pupils with looks printed by the state. The last legislature appropriated $250, 00 lor a text book printing plant, and if the project pans out as planned, the books will be printed at a sufficient prent to the state to necessitate no further outlays on account of depreciation or increased expenditures. Public printing is not always economical, by any mcns, but it has proven the only effective counter in many states; to the graft scandals which inevitably seem to result from the distribution of contracts amonß private firms. The extortion of the text book trust has been notorious for many years, especially

in Illinois, and frequent efforts have,

been made to stop it by a free text ; book sys'.enr. but various sorts of objections have thus far precluded the taking over of the book business by the state. Illinois will watch the Kansas experiment with peculiar interest. Whether it results in any huge economy to the school patrons or nor. it must be regarded as worth while if it removes the school from the clutches of the text book trust

COUNTRY SCHOOLS. (Peoria, 111., Star.) A writer in a contemporary publication deplores the present tendency of education in what he terms country schools and remarks that they are not keeping up with the times. The criticism may be dismissed as unworthy. In the first place, the country school of a generation ago. which was characterized by "readin. 'ritin and 'rithmetic." has disappeared. In its place has come an efficient educational system, which fits the young men and women who attend with practical ideas of the duties they will be called upon to perform v hen they come to face life's responsibilities for themselves. It may be that the average country school lacks something of the "fads" which aie now beginning to take up the time and attention of city school authorities, but in the main the country schools of this day and generation are a ctedit to their community and are much better off without the fadi. which the writer aforesaid laments so lugubriously.

Mi:Asriiixc; paitji glare. (Kansas Industrialist. Manhattan. An instrument to measure the glare of book and magazine paper has been perfected at the United States forest products laboratory at Madison. Wis., so that this property in printing paper may be expressed i

Turning the Tide The margin between success and failure is often very small. In most cases just some little thing will often turn the tide from failure to success. The reverse is also true. A little money saved and ready for a critical moment may at some time in your life be like the floating board to the drowning man. American Trust Company 7e OX S.WINCS.

The Same- Money Will Now Buy Ten

Much

Get this Electric I ichliii lhat formerly cost 72 conti now costs but 7 2 cents. You set approximately ten times as much for the same money as was to be had sixteen years ago. I et us show you ask us to prove this point.

I. & M. Bell 462.

Home 5462.

mm

'.nfiri

Wames of Former Residents of St. Joseph County That an invitation to attend St. Joseph county's great Indiana centennial celebration Oct. 3, 4 and 5 may be sent to every former resident of St. Joseph county, persons having their addresses are urgently requested to at once fill in the accompanying coupon and take or send it to the Chamber of Commerce immediately.

COUPON

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Name ..... i City or Town . . . .s,;. . J Street umber , r Left St. Joseph county about ... . . years ago. Last address in St. J oseph. county was .... 1 .. : I Sent in by J Of ..i

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