South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 276, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 October 1916 — Page 6
3ioMv i; t.i.m;. (Hit)iii.K i if it.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND JSJEWS. TIMES Mo mine: Evening Sunday. JOHN' HI:nT:V ZrVIV.. KHtor. CAunu:!. p. i'mmkius, publisher.
public i. being 1 sand-lagged" hy the railroads already. He knows that they (.an well afford the shorter hours
arid the consequent increase of pav per hour this too i ; without a sign of Increase in transportation charges, i that if, they could affortl it if they were not in "water" (up to their neck. His greatest suspicion is that the ! interstate commerce Kommission will lark the hackI hone to refuse the railroad the collection of dividend j upon that water. Do you catch his drift, our dear con. temporary? You ought never to quote a socialist un
fit K MoltMNfi ,,5.M.,,.It.n Vou catch his drift first. otherwise, quoting him
lUl.li IN NOKTHKIiV IM.IWA M ONI. ."Vi. ..... .., .
IN T I'llN AT ION AI. M,H im 'MiiiniriiMMn, yun are iiiiium ( ra.nu 10 maie
i t . i :ii n i " i- i
Says Attacks On ! Adamson Bill Are Unfounded
THE MELTING POT
Conducted by Stuart H. Carroll
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f ;?';! -lu :!.ri 'paper in tat ntKide Indian poii r'iM -n-i j what Herder had in mind in this connection.
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doubt, was what the Pennsylvania mine owners did to the public following Roosevelt's socalled settlement of the anthracite coal strike. Arbitration raised wages
i atiout 10 jer cent and the mine ow ners increased the , price of coal GO per cent temporarily, since which its
" i , , - . f ; ha never fallen helow an increase of "0 per cent. There C,ll ftt t'i. -7i e er t-1"p'n- :iN've raimU-r an-i ak ror , rt.' , t t it.i. a r .lit. r;.(i. A '. rtis:n. ( lretipition, or A'- , wa.s no interstate commerce commission to stop that
. . . . . ,.i. i)rxrt inntten-i increase, n; there in the muTter nf freiuht nd t.;ss-
vwli: ' n.:il.e-i :i;t i"""!'""' " V
the the
I Pennsylvania min owners. I) vou think ne is wise f
in this lack of confidence, Mr. Contemporary? If not, how can you credit him with any dependable wisdom in the matter of his criticism? If you cannot accept his remedies, why place so much stress upon his assumption of . il ? P.elieve us. dear contemporary, when you turn for succor to a socialist, you want to use vour own brains
t...:i t,"t, b.id . x.- utw.ri. P'-'-r delivery 7 i cnt;er rates, but Herder has no more confidence in t- l. phr.-.. 1-e. et.-.. t- l.e.i. -f dep:rtnielt lth U hi " '- tl'-.i'.k-.z I N. w- nrn's tLtroen trnnk lias. all ol interstate commerce commission than he has in
lh ric-;.:j.l to II"""' ad Tail -lu
miM 'Kfi'TION i:Ti:S: M'TTiin? und I'.venins r.ditlon -!.- S-:n !:iv. W- P.rr.tn? or Kvenms Ivlitioo, daifv. wl;U::Z Vur...y.' f.y in .il. per v,r in vn. P-JiVercI l. .vrri-r in S.ut!i l-nI and MisLawaka. A per jtar iu adv.iij.e. tJr 1'- J tU-
AnVf;ilT!M(i KTI: A.k the aIvertiinc .Irpartment-F-r,i-r. tve.-t Ni-II. pr s. nt itivs : CoNi;. I.OKKNZKN & WooliiLVN. -'S. 1 iftli At.. N-w Y-rk City and Adv. I'ddR. . .ii . v- .... Ti,,,, .n,ii-iw.'4 to keen Us a n vertisi n ir
..,.!,' f-,...' fr'..r fiMii-lulcnt in:srepresont.iti.-n. Any j-ersouias well as his. for he is a most suspicious critter; sus
CHICAGO. Oct. 1. 'Charles K.
J Hutches would better show a little
of his passion for investigating facts l efore taking action by pain,J? some attention to 'the provisions of the Adamson eiicht hour hill before he jumps into an attack upon it," declared A'uRust kks of Green Hay, Wis., general chairman of the railway trainmen of the Chicago w North Western railroad, in taking emphatic exception to the republican candidates attitude toward the tailroad strike settlement. The railroad employe's official said Mr. Hughes was making himself ridiculous in the eyes of the working people of the country uy his ill-infonn-cd attacks on the eight hour law for railroad operatives. Mr. Icks was in Chicago with John Pannon, vice prerident of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, cn organization matters connected with the brotherhood.
J.h ts oriipl P-ly.
V?th Si! k:zCr& ! "iCioUS f Vrr ythin With Uu' lf'aM tinKe.
or inai concents to capn.uism any ngnts wnicn numanity. law, or government, are bound to respect, and he just simply delights in plunging the unitiated over his intellectual precipices into depths that they never
OCTOBER 2, 1916.
DEFINITIONAL. You m.iv have noticed it The News-Times has adopted tiie new definitional spelling for this column, with particular reference to Charles Evans Hughes W-h-e-w-s. Consult vour Wehster.
TO BE ASSASSINATED. The attempt by Hughes chief supporters in California, the preck ts-Otis-outhern Pacific cabal, to ius-.-asMnato Hiram Johnson, the regularly nominated republican candidate for the U. S. senate, is on in California. Close upon Hughes' personal humiliation of Johnson, on II utiles' recent tour of the Pacüie coast, comes an upon bolt by the organs of the cabal. The regular republican contention at Sacramento is pronounced the gathering of mongrels" and its platform u tainted" pronouncement; the choice of such, latn for th rck'.ilar republican Mate committee as Meyer bis.-n.-r, K. A. Dickson. Marshall Htimson. Chester Kov.ell and 1'. II. McCarthy is declared to be indecent n ru! iu mi I ting. The call fr Hughes' nun to bU if clear and distinct, as thu! issue. i by tl:e H ught s organs of the golden state. The plan of the assassins will b'.' to trade off Johnson for votes for Hughes. It is a game that two un play at. It is clearly up to Johnson'- followers to trade off Hughes votes for votes for Johnson, the resalarly nominated republican choice for l senator. In a lengthy editorial in the Los Angeles Times, the Oti: crowd standpatters throw down the gauntlet to Johnson and the progressive prodigals. If there is any man anywhere who believes that the old guard is going. ;o swallow the do.-e administered to it at Hacramcnto, he ought to read said editorial. If it doesn't spell '"holt,' we cannot translate plain Knglish. As Francis J. Jlenoy remarked concerning the announcement that the g. o. p. and progressives wer .igain united at iacramento; "Yes, they are united like two torn cats tied by their tails and thrown over a clothes line." It is much the same everywhere.
knew, or perhaps dreamed of.
DANGER IN QUOTING VICTOR BERGER IN AID OF G. 0.Tl We have known for long that eventually the advo-,-;itis of strong centi alizcd power and the socialists
would recognize their relationship, but we hardly expected to .-. e a rcpublk an newspaper, like the one in JSouth r.er.o. so early m the game as this, embracing Victor 1'erger, the on e Kne sociah-t congressman, .till il is well that it has. Its quotation of P.erger has thrown more li'ht into the editorial columns of that newspaper than has .hown there since the passing of iLs senior founder. P.erger has analyzed the Adamson
t.i -ht ii.iiir 1.U1 for our i-nntcninnnrv ev.ictlv ;i it I
wanted the bill analyzed; from the only an-le within iti- p"--iMe comprehension. Our contemporary, however, forgets to state, that p.erger, in the remarks quoted, was talking to iahsts. appealing to the working
THE VALUE OF IMPORTS. What will happen when we get all the gold that p v an spare, and whe t the credit w e are extending reaches the langer point? Stop doing business with Kurope? Or revise our traditional view of import?, and welcome Europe's goods in exchange for ours? Already we have nearly all the gold that the allies can let ko without upsetting their financial systems and breaking their own credit. We have got back, in payment for our exports, most of the American securities that were held abroad, and we hold mortgages on near-
; ly all the rest. We jre no longer obliged to send hun
dreds of millions a year to Europe in payment of interest and dividends. We are not spending our usual $1'00,ÖOO,ÖOO or $1100, 000, öi.'O a year in Kuropeal travel. I'nanciafly, everything's corning in, and very little going; out. Europe is still able to buy great quantities of goods from us by means of credit loans. We have already extended about ? 1,500.000.000 of credit. The limit will be reached some time. What then? The traditional American view has always been to look with regret, and even hostility, on all imports. We have thought that nothing was worth while in international business except selling. We have hated to buy. Put it is becoming obvious that we can't continue selling such vast quantities of goods without buying proportionately. Even aside from the necessity of stabilizing foreign exchange and aside from our own needs for domestic consumption of foreign goods, the present tendency is to exhaust our raw materials. All the money coming in and none going out means all the goods going out and none coming in; and with no merchandise imported, how could we continue to export the manufactures that require foreign stuff in their making? Our imports hav, been increasing, but not nearly in proportion to our exports. Many economists are nowinsisting that our only hope of maintaining the great volume of export trade consists in a considerable increase of imports. Thus, they say. we shall enable Europe to finance further purchases, we shall have the materials we need to produce the exports, and we shall keep American labor and capital fully employed on profitable terms.
Tin: ro.M moxiiks. Some people laud the loveiy hfishts v hich pierce the upper regions. Par, far above the level of the rdir.arv legion. They lung for the society of rare and raptured classes. ilemote from unrefined contamination by the masses They hanker to commingle with the chosen of creation. To aviate in circles of surpass. ng elevation. Hut I regard the common run of ordinary creatures As one of nature's most successful, fascinating features. They may not shine in brilliant .-pots v i 1 1 scintillating brightness; Their conversation'." full of cr-'at stupidity and triteness; Their minds are not remarkably, miraculously clever; They mind their solemn p's and q's forever and torevtr. Put still, among our ordinary, mediocre neighbors. With ordinary loves and lives ar.d ordinary labors. We find, if we shall ever find, the reason for existence. The urue of life which drives us on with unrelaxed insistence To tread the ancient circle path, to love, to wed, to ch?rish, To bear, to rear, to marry off, to watch, and wait, ar d perish.
A. P.
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"The best that can be said for Mr. Hughes." Mr. Icks asserted, "is that he does not know what he is talking about. He is going'about the country declaring that the Adamson law is not an eight hour measure, but a law to force an increase in wages. It doe? not increase waces for any railroad employe unless the road requires him to work beyond regular hour. If the road does, it has to pay the price. The railroad is penalized for working an employe beyond the eight hour limit, which is the most effective encouragement the road could be given to observe the eight hour work day. The employes wanted to make the penalty for working trainmen more than eight hours a day as nearly prohibitive as possible by assessing time and a half for overtime, but waived that point for the sake of peace." Mr. Icks declared the people of the country will give Mr. Hughes and his supporters on election day the most stinging rebuke in recent history for their misrepresentations and attacks on a great forward step for the bettering of working conditions.
"These unfounded attacks are: making the working people of the, country lighting mad." he said. "Nothing- more effective could be done to spur them on to action than what Mr. Hughes is doing-. In my judgment the count of ballots on election day will show the thoroughness with which the stand taken by Mr. Hughes has been rebuked. "I did not vote for Pres't Wilson four years ago. Hut entirely aside from his action in the railroad strike, I and the other workingmen of the country would have ignored party lines to return him to the presidency. He is higher than any party. He is the only president we have had that measures up to Lincoln. He has handled an endless succession of ditficult problems in a most skillful manner. and the American people will show their admiration for him by the big vote they give him in November."
doxt ni: iut!ii:iii:i. When the sky of hope o'er your land o' dreams Is clouded darkly, and it seems Tiie rain is coming" let it pour. Tlure's sunshine when the storm is o'er. When vour davs are dull and yoi.r nights seem long And the world looks altogether wrong; Just grit your teeth and force a smile. You're living still! Ain't that worth while? II. s. A ciiA.wi: rem .u;r.MrxT. Mrs. Patsy Anne Chance, of Parry, Mo., is suing her mother-in-law, Mrs. Elizabeth Chance, for alienation of her husband's affections. His name is James 11. Chance. Now. If Elizabeth Chance chanced to alienate James Chance's chance affections from Patsy Anne Chance, what chance has Patsy Anne Chance of collecting from Elizabeth Chance? Sure, the lawyers' chants will decide it. "A PARADOX, A PARADOX." (iieece is not a Palkan state. Put Greece is a balkin' state. cissom:n ruoi somi:wiii:ki:. "Johnnie, what's a triple alliance?" , "It's when teacher an' paw an' maw lecide I ought to have a lickinV
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was p.oi; a spoin ? there any spc it ou re
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Asks Pol of pretty Sue; "Well." with hesit: tion. "I'm rather fond of you." did cAspru ciasi nr.il? The neglected wife: "So vou're going out again, are you, Casper, and leave me all alone? 'Tis business that takes vou away, vou say, jour business? Ah, the same old excuse truly vour business must be very absorbing. What's that you say? You're a manufacturer of blotting paper? J. U. It. tiii:m days: The melancholy davs have come. The sadd- st of the year; Too cold for sister's sodas. Too cold for brother's beer. co.Mi: ox ix, rrs 1111:1:. H. E. S. suggests that we form a "Names is Names" club and leads the subscription list with this one. I. M. Wetternell, manager of the Elue Front drug store in a Kansas town. yi:s, wi: hi: stii.l livixc. hit That man who died in Philly Was aged one hundred two. He drank a bit and smoked a bit. And yes. he used to chew. Which proves the proposition That some pink poet sun-'. "The bad are here for many a year. The good, alas, die young;."
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First! A WESTERN UNION telegram gets instant attention and brings the first reply WESTERN UNION
Service
broadens territory at least expense and keeps you ahead in the hot race of competition. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COL
TALK NIGHT AT THE LIBRARY. An editorial in the October number of the Ladies' Home Journal, commenting on libraries, finds one big fault. Absolute silence is the rule the library reading room. People come there to read and acquire information, but they are not allowed t. comment on what they have read until they have left the reading room. n the other hand, the men of the town gather around the principal store evenings to exchange com
ment on everything from the weather to politics. Perhaps their comment doesn't get anywhere, perhaps it accomplishes nothing definitely worth while. And yet, isn't this brushing up against the opinions of his neighbors a good thing )or any citizen 7 And wouldn't it be
clas-cs. or that his .or.p!aint is not that the Adamson j even more valuable if b; sed on facts found in the books till govs to far. bat that it has not g..ne far enough. land current magazines of the public library? Will "..r contemp'Tary accept Mr. Kerger's remedy j .-o the writer of the editorial suggests that on one as well as h:s vTiticim f the Adamson law? That is j night a week talkir.g be allowed in the libraiy reading the test. It is r.ot enough that a law is bad. What is J room. Let people speak out about w hat they are readthe use of c--mplaining if no t tfort is to be made to cor- ing. let them express some of the reactions that iure, t the ground of complaint? l'.ergtr. at least, isjevitably come to the reader whether he agrees or discor.'ei't o:i that score. He sas the remedy is so i agrees with the article before him. ciahsm; gov , rr.merit ownership and operation of the j of .ourse, it might not work. The talk might be railro uis. and all other factors of production and dis-jjust as vague and futile as that at the corner store, tribation. We think he has slightly exaggerated the j Hut there is a reasonable chance that such an eximmediate evil t!Tect.- of tiie Adatnson law not going j change of views would be worth much to the people that far, 1 ,.t that it will eventually come is as certain j who care enough about the world's doings to go to the as the rising ana the vetting of the sun. There will j library to read aloiit then'. s'uth a scheme might hive to i"1 michty new-birth to h'Jman nature; a (serve to irerea-e interest in .world events as well as genuine rfl'.gai-ec-orioruie transformation of the rtla-:beal affairs, making broader and more intelligent citiUoi.s l-etwteri capital and la-or. establishing them asjzens of the towns people. "Talk" nii;ht at the library h wlur.tary c-i'p ration, or the demands of social j-ounds worth trying. j.:tic v will fcrce txavlly what Victor Kerker 'Aas dnvi ;it- : iJr at Britain s refusal to let false teeth go to (ierAnd that n,v-iirih to human, nature; that genuine ,n lV by parcel post is another example of Pertidious rc!igo- t ouorroc transformation, ,N just about as an- . Albion' inconsistency. What harm could those teeth probable, at ar.v c.irh day, a the republican party t,0 v0eing that she's already cut off Germany's food
The Public Pulse
rYimmmri ration for this Humn may tf ginned anonymously bat noit b acroüif- riled by the u.trne of the wiitr to 1nur? jrood faith. No repotmi'blllty for facts or sentlrunts fxprewwsl will b aftrmrd. lionet dlwcusRlon of putrtic quetlotw It laitrd. but with the right reserved to eliminate virions arul o-bjertlonubl matter. TLe column If free. Bui, be reasonable.
ness. but many doubt his business ability, ec'y. line was endeavorirg to keep conservation ideals but at the same time to increase the efficiency and accuracy when he made this change, and if there have been anybad results it might 1 well for Mr. Pinchott to name them. tThe president has so many tremendous problems to work out. and has such an unexampled re-cord of constructive success in handling them, that it is hardly right for a citizen of Mr. Pinchott's standing, however strong' his party leanings, not to give the president a square deal. I happen to know, as Mr. Pinchott could have found out by inquiring, that the president ii:i.s close friends watch
ing the conservation situation, ar.d!
that he has no intention of allowing anything to happen that ought not to happen. NOHMAX HAPCOOI). Vice President Woodrow Wilson Independent League.
WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS
fa
f
make it. In a ser.se. one an hardly blame Per per
r Ins impat icvc Social revolution is the thing that
re want.--; not s'.:.il evolution. Sief, regulatory institutions a. the interstate i cm r.u rce commission, the federal i.-r1" i ommissiori, and now. the labor omir.ission
supply
prt'pos "
t!
Adams m law t.- invstigate the
There's enough g'old in the Pnited States now to give j every man. woman and child in yellow coin. Have
vou g'ot yours:
con
ditior.s-t r .vtcd by to- m.-...-ure; these are all. altogether
the .V.i'.H.i'.o an. He anticipate- that the
too slow fo pub!:-, the
or,
-v er
sanier of the trat.--;
comp
ate the
a Iii'1
i.f t r. r.sportation. and the con-
rt d. w til
j t'.reek is sa:d to be a musical language ar.d the lates; I premier cf Clrcee e is named Kalogeropoulos'
be "gold-bricked" to '
s-lfed t' their
f, r tiie sb.ort.r hours vouch-! yr uays it,ul incanH of avotdinP Jitr''s. war-, etc.. a cau-e he has i. o conhdence , after they are prevented, consult Charles 11. Hughes.
in That r publica:! ire. -ted interstate commerce, com- j .ii-i"i. j Hughes is well on the road to become fully 1,'JcO per
Victor Perser kr.uw and knows full well. th Ii Kent a candidate or more
NORMAN' 11 P(. OOI Iti:PLIi:s to t. (H)si:vi:lt imxciiot. NKW VORIv'. Sept L".. Editor News-Times: Gilford pinchot is an intimate friend of mine and I have a very high opinion of his character
j and of the v crk he has done. His public letter on conservation, published by vou recently, however, (shows a failure to get at the facts of ! what the Wilson administration has j done. Some of the mis-statements in it are wholly outside the domain of "opinion and are demonstrably un- ' just. After giving Mr. Wilson credit for the Alaska railroad bill, which , assured government control of coal j lands in Alaska. Mr. Pinchot goes I on to talk about the president's en- : dorsing various bills when they were
not in satisiactory condition. ill Mr. Pinchot be good enough to explain where these endorsements by the president are found? He makes a special point of the Shields' bill.
j Anybody who really undertook to j get information about this bill could
do so. The fight against it in the senate was conducted by Sen. Walsh, who certainly stands very well with the administration. After Sen. Walsh had sufficiently shown its danger
and its weaknesses, he, and various' other opponents of the bill, voted tot pass it for the express purpose of lettinir it uet into conference. It was' fully explained th.it in the confer-1
ence they would oppose the passage of anv bill unless it was in substance
the Ferris bill and not the Shields' :
' bill. The Ferris bill is the lull ap- j I proved by Mr. Pinchot and other! ! i onserv ationahsts. I don't believe j j that anybody who stands close to thej administration has any doubt that)
the president would have vetoed thel Shields' bill if it had come to him 1 in the shape in which it left the sen-!
ate. If Mr. I'incroii really possesses the information he indicates he does
1 possess, it would be startlingly interesting to have him tell the pub- : lie how he got it and exactly what j it is. L It is pretty vague to attack the secretary of the interior for letting Mr. j Newell go from the reclamation ser
vice, ana merely alleging tnat the commission which takes his place is controlled by politicians. Nobody doubts Mr. Newt'U's hijh-uiindevi-
oiisiiKvi: tiii: m-:srirs. ((.'lev eland Press. Ind.) Nearly GO per cent of the. present congress is made up of lawyers, representing less than one-half of one per cent of the male voters o the country, while only three per cent of the membership are farmers, vet :: per cent of the male voters ate farmers. It doesn't look right, and, of course, isn't risht, if we're representative government. A lawyer is no better qualified to represent farm interests than a farmer is to represent banking interests, and the notion that lawyers know best how to make laws is knocked in the head by the fact that we have a vast multitude of innocuous laws and bad laws and laws put in their coffins by the I. S. supreme and other courts. Put the ig proportion of lawyers in legislative bodies has prevailed from the beginning. Of the ." signers of the Declaration of Independence, i: ware lawyers, and the dominance of the legal profession has held throughout all the congresses. The reason for it is plain. The lawyer can successfully and profitably combine business and politics. whereas such combination spells ruin to. most others, especially to farmers. If the lawyer doesn't get some ni. e. soft job through politics, his political activity gives hfYn ucquaintaiue and advertising that are productive of office business. In this connection it is interesting to note that, as presidents, this representative government has had 2 0 lawyers. tA farmers Washington and Wm. Henry Harrison two s- 1diers. one teacher Wilson. o:ie "statesman" Johnson, and Roosevelt. It is a country of great opportunity. Any boy may aspire to the pres dency ;nd other high oftices. all right, but he'd better get into law anö politics. The representing business and the political jobs surely run along that line.
entitled to Iiis opinion free from thej t hallenge of prejudice. Always the ! presumption should exist that the j citizen is honest in motive. WiHiout i this rule of conduct our political ac-j tivities would be sorry affairs. ! There is now opening a national ! canvass for the presidency. With it; come uncharitable attacks upon ! prominent persons taking part in f9l in the capacity of private citizens, j
Most conspicuous is that leveled against Thomas A. Ildison. who has pronounced in favor of the re-election of Pres't Woodrnv Wilson. Mr. Kdison was. until the Chicago convention acted, a zealous supporter of Theodore K oosevelt, whose nomination he openly u;ge 1. For this Iowas not criticized. Hut now ihat he has taken Mr. Wilson as his second choice his deed is impugned through the publicity department of the party organization supporting Charles L Hughes. In partisan print sent broadcast throughout the country the public is asked to believe that it was because Secretary of the Navy Josephus lanicls installed the Kdion storage batteries in submersible vessels and suppressed the fact of their initial failure, the inventor hi repaying him with the support of his chief. In other words. Mr. IMison is a sleekrascal. Conversely, cjifford Pinchott and Dr. Harvey Wiley, who are supporting Mr. Hughes, are patriots. Such conduct on the part of political managers is scr ndalous. None but blackguard would countenance it. It is the duty of every citizen who loves independence and treasures the sanctity of a good name to enter a protest to the Hughees managers. Let the political freebooters, swagbellied and sur ercilioijs. abuse ach other as muci as they will Lilt compel them to keep' their v enomous tongues in their cheeks in the presence of conscientious opinion.
Here's One Necessity That's Gone Down
m rrice
Electricity has gone continuously down. The downward trend of Electric Prices through the years is as interesting as the situation is exceptional. Such a sharp contrast with the upward trend of other necessities. Let us show you.
Bell 462. Home 5462
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WILSON AM HAV. (Mala. Fla.. Star. Hem.) We notice that a number of republican and some democratic papers criti' ie Pres't Wilson for appointingCongressman Hay to a federal judgeship. Mr. Wilson, wlien he appointed Hay, literally kicked him upstairs, giving him a life jo'1 in order to get him out of congress. For years Mr. Hay, who is one of the greatest pork barrel artists in ihfl house, has held his position ort' the military oommit'.ee by virtu of: seniority, ar.d used his position to promote the schemes of his friends and to the detriment of the army. . It's the od-hloodel selfishness of su h as. Hay that costs the lives ofhundreds and thousands .f irood j mep w h-n war comes on. Hay l-j an incubus to his party and a d;s-, grace to representative government.
I i -äo i
-Am going to sell my home at cSOl Portage avenue cheap and on easy payments. Come and look at it for j yourself. Doors open Sunday from 2 till 4 p. m. j I have just completed eight new houses on the opp- J site side of the street, near this location. Evev one of I
these houses is a wonder and can be bought at a bargain. Charles E. Smith 303 Citizens' Bank Bldg.
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For Banquet or Camp-Fire I-.-i fc Perrins 13 an indispensable accessory. It is a Helirdd hv.tti trthr fnvte nf thr rriin'r
.mi 1 tho Li-pnw fl 'i'il nr ret ite jf thfl
huuter.
lX)It cu:x POLITICS. (Cinc innati Inquirer. Iem. ) There are bounds of propriety which should not be crossed, even though partisanship tempts alluringly during a political canvass. These are drawn about the personal telle' vt the individual voter, who U
not si;i: i:i. The applicant for cook was untidy and insolent in appearance. "Pon't hire her." .vhispered Jones to Iiis wife: "I don't like her looks." "Put." remonstrated his wife, "just consoler th- reputation for cooking she bears." 'That doesn't matter," said Jones testily; "we don't want any shebears cooked." Ladbs' Home Jour-r.al.
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Tte otlycririaal Wcrceitrritlre Soce
Seed po.'til fur free kitchn hanirer rr.nUin.i-?
LEA U PFHRINS. Hubert Street. N York Td
hi: KMrvv. Teacher Johnny, can vou tell m what a hypocrite is? Johnny Yes. ma'am. It's a boy what comes to sohc-oi with a smile on his face.
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114 W. WVhUXN GTON' A1i
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