South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 27, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 27 January 1917 — Page 4

sTrmv aiti:i:n'oox. jam auv it. i9ir.

THE SOUTH EEND NEVVS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES M o r n i n g E v en ng S und ay. JOHN IIKN'It Y ZUVI'I.. TMltor. (JACRIKL T:. Fl'MMI'iy. Publisher.

OM.V AVSfX I TF:I PKH MOJtXINT. rRNCIIE rArr.u in noktiii:!: imh and only r.ri: kmrlJVINO Tilt; INTI.RNATIO.NAI. NEWS 8 HI. VICT. l SOUTH II KNI No other neTvjipfr in the ""tate protetM l.T two I1.! Ir tdgut and il.u nw aefTbe-4; lo only e;btwrmimri paper !n a rite r.uHUe Indinnipoh. l'nblitnJ dy of th par ni twlr; on all ny except s;uni;y 0' Holiday Liiterel at tbe Sutli Cent itof f I'.e second Ia rualL

the sea for neutral. It intimately affects international law, human rights and American honor. Thus far we have liven able to hold the submarine peril within hound by rigid Insistence on that right. We have also been able to exert a wholesome influence on the allies, keeping them from unduly provoking l-boat attacks.. To renounce our sea right voluntarily would deprive us of a potent weapon for regulating the war in the interest of civilization. It will be time enough to warn Americans off any class of merchant Miips when the situation ha got beyond our control.

f

To Enjoy the Glories Of Winter Go to the Country Says Serviss

THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY Office: 210 W. Colfax r. !!m riione 1131. Bell Toon 2100.

r!i nt the r.ffk .r tp!ffhrne above numbers ar.i i f'"1" dprtment wnnte.J-IMIforial. Advertlslnr. Clrvulr t' n. nr Ac o'jDtlnc. Fnr "varit adv" if oir nnrne n In i'un telephone aire fry. Mil will be mallM .nffer inerti .n. Import Inattention to bualneaa. f.. I eje.uti'.n. p..)r deMvery of papers. MM 'dephone aerrb. et. t hem! rt lep-i rtinent with vhlcn yoa re lejlinr. The W5-Tlme hin thirteen trunk lines, all of Li'h respond I) Home I'l-one ll.'l nn 1 !'d 2100.

t'BsCRlPTlOX RTf: Mnrnlnc nnd Frentn;: Edition. .Mnclo. Copy. LV; Stindaj-. .V : Morrdng or Kvejilng T'dUKn. ''nil.T. in-udin Sund.-iy. t,r rriMI. $ i-r year In a dm nee. DehverM ,w ,ifUr In South I'.onl and Mlshawatn. 53.00 per year lu adran-c, or 12 by the week. AD VK KT I SIN; ICATK: Ak the ndvert!tnr drpartmenr. Mreien Adrert!!ng Reprr sent itlve : CO.NIJ, LOHKNZr.N i VVOOnMAN. 22" riftS Ar. .W York City, nnd Adv. Hide, 'hirago. The .Vcwu-Timn r ndvom to keep Its adyertlsing 'o!umni fre from fraudulent misrepresentation. Any person defrauded through p tronnge of any advertisement In tMf paper will confer a favor oo the management by reportlM; the fict completely.

JANUARY 27, 1017.

CONGRESSIONAL CROSS-EXAMINERS. Most of our ongresmen are lawyers, Kipht of ti'C eleven rncmbers of the houo committee ines.tigating the Wall Street 'kak-' on the president's peace note are lawyers. All of them, presumably, have had -ome practical experience in their profession. Two of them have been district attorneys-, and so must be especially familiar with the taking of testimony. And jet the committee has deemed it necessary to appoint a F.oston lawyer to examine the witnesses appearing before the f ommittee. "Why elect laer. as representatives," asked the New York World, 'if the public is never to receive the benefit of their local training'.'" Still, there aie lawyers and lawyers. It seems to be agreed that the Hoston gentleman named for the job is o,uite competent to handle it. Unfortunately the congressional lawvers heretofore in charge have produced no such impression, of their ability. It would be a relief to the country to see the thin taken up by somebody big enough not to let Tom l,nw.Mn or anybody else make a monkey out of the I'nited State government.

CALORIES, CASH AND CRIME. .Much tjood-natured riuieule has been heaped on the public diei-squad experiments so solemnly cariied out in Chicago, New York and elsewhere. A sort of scientific food craze has swept over the country. Public olhciabs have undertaken to prove that it's possible for an able-bodied adult to keep alive and well on a very moderate food-expenditure. The Chicago board of health demonstrated that men and women can get alon on 4 5 cent.V worth of food a day which any sane person knew perfectly well. The New York police department has undertaken to prove that it tan be done for 2" cents a day. Atid that's cjulte likely. The majority of Americans are actually doin it. Anybody with a rudimentary knowledge of mathematics can tigure it out for himself. The average family consists of live people. Children cost nearly as much for food as grown folks. On this basis the average American expenditure for food, per family, would bo around $l.2" a day. The average income is between $2 and $:'. a day. loes anybody imagine that our working population can afford to spend half its income for food? There is one genuine benefit, resulting from these experiments conducted in a blaze of publicity. They're educative. The public does learn something about food values which might not be gained from personal experience or tradition. it learns that "calorics"' are not particular viands, hut measures of food-fuel measures of the physical energy derived from the food. They are learning the lesson pointed out by Commissioner Woods of the New York police department. "It isn't the iiia:Uity of foul that a man consumes but the quality, that counts. Thousands of working people spend their money on foods that does not have the right nourishing or sustaining power.'" And there's a moral consideration, too. "If all housewives." savs ne commissioner. "prepared neals containing the proper nourishment for men of the house, there would be less drinking, and that wood mean a decrease of ,ilnic. Drink is the silent partner of almost everv crime that is committed.' And that, it seems, is why a police department happens to be giving public food lessons.

WINTER VACATIONS. out ideas about the relative amount of energy we have in the Minimer ana winter are all wrong, according to a volume on "Civilization and Climates" published by the Yale University Tress. We're not really "'run down" in the summer and full of "pep" in the winter. We feel that way, but our feelings are deceptive. Careful observation was m?.de of the work in factories throughout the year. It was found that Ui'dr best work, in quantity and quality, was in the autumn months. That could not have been because cf the energy accumulated in summer vacations, because they had not wumnier vacations. They were found to be at their worst in the middle of winter. Krom that time on. their efficiency curve rose until the middle of June and remained nearly stationary through Julv It roe steadily then until the middle of November. The conclusion is that the fall is the best time for everybody to work, because then the climate conditions produce more physical energy. That might possibly have been expected. Hut who would have supposed that we have almost as much energy in the spring, and that we are far more energetic and efficient In the summer than in the winter? It seems to follow- that our vacttion syscem is topsyturvy. Crom aa efficiency standpoint we ought to work through the summer, and take our vacations in January when our bodily force needs recruiting. The investigator m altes this specific recommendation. He suggests, too. that one reason why we Americans are so nervous is because we keep working at high pressure through the cold weather, when our vitality is low. This experiment, however, we carried out in southern New Kngland, 'tnd perhaps its conclusions are only valid in the same climatic belt. Different results might be obtained in the southern states.

"SOCIETY" AND LABOR. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Astor, the recognized leaders of New York socie'y, are giving a series of dinners in the interest of "Industrial Americanization." These functions are devcted entirely to the interests of American industry, and deal especially with the welfare of the workmen. The first dinner, held a month or so ago, brought together a notable group of educators, newspaper and magazine editors and leaders of trade and manufacture. The second, held last week, was limited to the engineering profession. Mechanical, electrical, civil and chemical engineers, representatives of technical colleges and editors of engineering journals assembled not to discuss the machinery, but the men who handle the machinery. The idea running through all the addresses ".as that "the engineer owes as much or more thought to the human element in industry as he does to the consideration of the steam boiler or dynamo." It's something new for engineers to talk that way. Hut it's still more impressive to find "society" honestly busying itself with such matters. We all know, by repute, the old New York society, with its follies and extravagances, at once the amusement and the shame of a nation that had no other "aristocracy. " Hut we hear of no more "monkey dinners," and less than ever of conventional functions. Society leaders are going in for all forms of public service. It's one of the most striking and wholesome signs of the time that the very citadel of the nation's aristocratic society has turned even from conventional entertainment to serious and sympathetic consideration of the men at the other end of the social ladder.

OUR SEA RIGHTS. It was generally supposed that the ngJU f Americans to travel on whatever ships they please, war or ro war. had been definitely settled. The Mcl.emore ieolutior.. meant to warn iir citizens against crossing the sea tinder anv belligerent I'ag. was rVünitcIv defeated a vear ago. and sentiment since that time has plainly strengthened in favor .-f stiffly maintaining American rights. Lately, howev er, the .!d effojt to t.eice . ongress in this matter has been leiiewed. Senators and iep- ; e e i ? t a t i v cs have been deluged with telegrams urging them to support a resolution warning Americans to . eej. off ship of anv of the entente powers. And Hep. 'aiy f Milwaukee has intruduied s'.oh a resolut.on. It m be admitted that there is pn-labU more reason for the wainmg now than tlicie was a vear ago. There are dii-.4u;etin rumor fiom Jermany indicating a possible renewal of C-boat warfaie on a more ! .ihloss t alt- than Oer. And report- from Copland -peak cf plans to arm every merchantman in a way hat would apparently place them technically in the tn.ed cruiser la-o and render them legally liable to attack without w r.u.ig. cbviouslv. if anv large numi of the allies' freight ;,nd passencer ships are going1 ' t ins themselv into warships lIuj tju. (jerman siibo..'tirscs are going t i tin amu-'k torpedoing all enemy men har.tu -n at sight, any U Ihgt r ent tbig i going to f danger mar k for s' afatw.g American. Hilt we (,,n i rov-; 1 1 ; i - tn lg- when we tome to it. No pmaiph Involved in tbi- war is nior important t" Americans tlnun the meinten mi c of the freedom of

SEEING INTO THE FUTURE. A Nebraska farmer writes to the Omaha Hee in great perplexity of mind. Ho wants to know when and how the war will end. It isn't mere idle curiosity, he explains. He has a farm in winter wheat, and it eloesn't look as if there'll be more than half a crop. If the war's going to end soon, he knows wheat will drop, and he might as well plow up that crop and plant corn. If the war continue beyond next harvest, even half a normal wheat crop may be profitable. Many of his neighbors are in the same dilemma. And so he puts it squarely up to the Hee: "What is the real truth? Will the war go on or not? Will it last another year? And ' is or is nct Germany going to hi beaten'."' IMitors are not really omniscient. The Hee cleverly evades the question by replving that "anyone who knew how and when the wa would end could make so touch money thai he wouldn't have to bother about whether to plar.t wheat or corn." That is probably true. Hut as'de front any mere speculative interest, what a quantity of people there must be in the werld today who are asking the same question that Nebraska farmer asked, and whose material interests, perhaps even life-work, ate bound up in the rejdv? The war is directly arTectiim the fortunes of hundreds of million. If there is anything in prophecy, anything in astrology or clairvoyance, any possibility of human beings foreseeing the future or receiving illumination from a better informed "other world." now is the time to practice it. Hat the seers and mediums are strangely silent.

H Garrett I. Sori If you want to enjoy winter, go , into the country. This statement is ' contrary to the general idea, even of j people who live in the country, but ' It Is true. The temperature may be 1 lower on the thermometer scale back J among snowy hills, but the air is less j biting t'ian along the teacoast. Ten ! degrees below zero do not feel as I cold there as 10 degrees, or ome- j times 20 degrees, above zero do in J New York or Chicago. i

e nave many societies and associations for sending city children into the country for a, few days or weeks in mid-summer, in order that they may see how beautiful it is in its green robes. It would be a good thing if as many could be sent in mid-winter in order that they might know how splendid the country is under its white snow blanket. A tine night, with a full moon shining on the coruscating hills, is a spectae le of almost unearthly splendor. On such a night a skating party on a country pond, or a coasting party on a glittering hillside, where the leaping sleds shoot with billowy motion over the snowburied fences, amid shouts of laughter from the gay riders, is an experience to be remembered for a lifetime. A sleigh-ride, with jingling bells. ringing-hoofed horses and creaking runners, and with the enfolding comfort of bear skins and buffalo robes, is a species of pleasure that overmatches the joys of au-tomobiling.

ALAHM I IiOCKS. Alarm clocks are ecnspirators acainst the human weal. When they unwind at six a. m. their long and stirring reel. The waking millions mention them in term? extremely curt; ur nerves are fiercely shattered and our feelings grossly hurt By such unkind contrivances with no regard or heed Cor our immediate demand and pitiable n?ed. Alarm clocks are the myrmidons of destiny ami fate. They shout: "Get up and out of here! You have no time to ivait: Another djy is on the job and if you lose f-. minute Yofll tind the game is being played but that you are not in it! The opportunity is jours hut if you do not grab it siorne guy who's up and dressing now is mighty hure to nab it!" Hut if you go to bed at night like wise and careful men Uefore the steeple bell has tolled the solemn stroke of ten. You'll rise to greet with merry smiles the vigorating dawn. Without a single kick or interjection, cuss or yawn. Alarm clocks do not sound the bell with all their vital powers To wake the lad who hits the hay at reasonable hours. Arthur Brooks Baker

For some persons the aspect of the winter night sky is alone an Irresistible attraction countryward. The greatest and most magnificent constellations that the heavens contain are then on view. Thej' are virtually invisible from city streets. The city shuts out the starry, sky ajid tries to be a little universe by itself. Sirius is an unnoticed spot behind the glare and smoke of the city, but in the country it is the diamond of the firmament, a sun of suns, a prismatic blaze of ineffable light, the star of ancient lore, god of the mysterious Nile and ef all the crowded nver valleys of antiquity. Al Shira, Sothis. Sibor Osiris. Thoth, Canicula, Mazzaroth, the Shining One, the Chieftain, the Star of a Thousand Colors! The self-centred city prefers to worship the petty gems in its shop window?. How can it comprehend or even see this star, elcep-buried in the bosom of the universe? Hut the sparkling winter landscape forms a frame for it. like ermine for a coronet. I saw. recently. Sirius humming in the wintry air, above a group of snow-sifted pines, like a rainbow sj un into a flashing point, and its spiritual fire warmed the frostj- night. In such circumstances one can understand how gross is that part of us w hich perishes if deprived of material heat.

The girl who imagines that every I sometimes save him from l ein; man she meets on the street is try- ! kicked out of the manager's office.

o

ing to flirt w ith her us tally has a face that would make the ordinary chap run. A letter of recommendation will not land a man on a job; but it will

After a girl has been married to a fellow awhile, she docs not consider it necessary to conceal the fact that she regards him as a mutt.

ONCE- OVERS

their sons have

been for it

aki: vol AMHiTiors ion vom HOY Parents, don't make a misfit out of your bo Fathers and mothers who have an "ambiticn" for

been the cause of a large number of failures. It is not a loose statement to make that many "tramps" have made by parents who tried to force their sons into professions which the boys had no liking. No man makes a success of anj- kind of work unless he likes

prefers it to any either. And to achieve anything out of the ordinary he must be enthusiastic. There can be no such thing as success without enthusiasm. Not the bubbling, effervescent kind, but intense interest, which holds the whole attention and commands every bit of effort and practical thought which an individual can summon. Maybe your boy's choice of workis a disappointment to you, but even so. he's better off at some work he likes than drudging out his life at some-tiling he dislikes. (Copyright. 1917. International News Servbe.)

A QUESTION AFTER HIM. That Indian poet. Tagore. has sailed from San Francisco for home, after roasting us for impoliteness and criideness. "America." he said, "is like a 4-year-old child, just beginning to ask questions." Guilty, dd warbler, guilty! Ar.i how mueh did America cough up for hearing you lecture?

JUST LIKE US. Hon. John lllai kwood of the Hritish io'..n.!cite at New York is a right hopeful fellow. He says that the Hritish navy ha a good description of that German raider ami a fair idea ef her whereabouts Tins reminds us so much c Villa. We have a good description of him and know about where he is. but .

In winter the architecture of the earth is revealed. Its lines come out plainly printed. The frames of the mountains are before you. All their mouldings stand forth. Their geological history appears written on their fronts. You can now see how thej- were folded from the rocky leaves of the planet and rolled and lifted up. Hiding in a train on the west side of the Hudson river you can perceive what the geologists mean by the "Tiiconie Revolution." as you watch the passing procession of the iron-gray highlands, the "roots and remnants" of the mighty range which tens of millions of years ago rose majestically from the compressed crust of the earth along the north Atlantic seaboard. Foldings and lines of stress and of wear are clear to view. You can see where ages of erosion have cut down the towering masses and left only hard stumps of rock in place of the loftj domes that buttressed the sky millions of years before the Appalachian range was ready to emerge from its sea-covered cradle and vet more millions of years before the Hoekj- mountains t-r-gan to crinkle up from the far western plains. The winter view is a long, farteaching view. With the obscuring

summer foliage gone, you get I glimpses, through and over nearer j heights, of far-off hills and mountains that are concealed in the leafy season. The white curve of a disj tant summit. peeping above the ! horizon, seem to lie off in some re

mote but adjacent world. It startles you with the thought of how high it must be tc be visible so far over tjje shoulders of the mountain athletes that stand around you. Stripped for the winter sports with the winds, the mountains look shiveringly cold, with glittering cordons of ice crossing their breasts

and bands of snow upon their heads. I but the landscape, as a whole, is I saved from an appearance of utter ; desolation by the groves and rows j of evergreens, whose scenic value is ' pronounced only in w inter. H is they that retain the tone of

life in the scene and preserve the landscape from becoming a ghastly image of universal death. And in the twilight of a still winter day there comes back, even to the barebranched trees. a grayish purple tone which shows that the face of nature has not been rendered quite so bloodless as it look? bj- the pinch of the frosts.

Five- Minute Talks by National Leaders

John t'lau.-en. manager of the foreign department of the Crocker National bank, San Francisco, is one of the most active leaders in the movement to preparv the nation for severe foreign trade competition after the war. At the request of the International News Service he has summed up certain important phases of this subject as follows:

" ' V ' - 1 i - ' z - r i i ' A '-Sr

mm

Looks as if George Perkins and Kv Colby were goin g to split off the G. . P. but we understand that Teddv .nd Tafl are still in alliance.

Tests or various kinds of concrete and cement mortars now under way in Germany, will extend over a period of "0 years.

Surgical instrument: that are not affected bv- the presence of electromagnets are being made of a secret steel alloy by a Kreuch professor of medical electricity.

Hy John ilaucn. Cnnkcr National Hank of San lYuncixo. Just now we are living in 'in epoch of great prosperity, in a way artificially stimulated by the demand for materials from the nations at war. Whether the advantage thus gained will be upheld depends largely on the skill and acumen of our bankers to wisely use their money power, and in the farsightedness ol our merchants to strive for great diversification of exports and imports. If to preserve our suc e.-sf ul progress we do not accept the present unexampled opportunities and applj ourselves practicably to the new order of things that loom beyond the day of peace, we shall be guilty of a great neglect. We are particularly liable to suffer unless our capital and commercial interests begin to realize the economic difficulties necessitating firm and original

methods of treatment which are

confronting us and may lair become even more pressing. Our bankers must be determined to modernize their methods in good time, as the lack of interest in this direction may seriously check the work or trade expansion. There are many reasons why the country banker particularly should eater upon a bi-oader Meld of operation?, as time alone will prove with what vigorous efforts the larger banks throughout the United States will e:iter even locally into competition by means of the added facilities a'forded by

the federal reserve act for establishing domestic and foreign branches. The consequent abser.ee, therefore, of restraint in rivalry fo? business, a affecting the smaller institution mav. in a measure, no lor.r retire

as a barrier to the larger banks, who. in their keen pursuit for expansion in business, are less likely to respect former restricted territorial rights. While this feature mainlj' affects home conditions, there is likewise to be considered the problems which confront us in our foreign banking relations. It would be well to study the objects of the new "Hritish Trade bank," now in process of formation, for the purpose as its name implies of furthering the commerce of Great Hritain. That institution, when organized and operated under efficient rnanagerment, with the power to base on its capital a forceful system of credit in the shape of acceptance, will no doubt soon gather the nucleus of a large foreign business. In the economic life of a nation commerce and banking are so closely interwoven that it becomes essential for every person engaged in business to have some knowledge of the parts played by these factors. The nature and use of money, th3 mechanism of exchange and the development of banking hi various parts of the world are features of vital concern to the commercial in

terests of our countrj-. It is aprarent that it will take something more than the offering of goods to build up and hold the trade which we are now in position to control. We should look ahead to future conditions tie prepared to meet aggressive European trade combinations and keep pace with rhe world's industrial advancement. Co-operative combinations sucli as may be deemed expedient to develop our foreign relations in normal times, are essential and should in no sense be considered a contractional restrait of free trading. A recognition of this principle in oversea trade

development, is, in my opinion, most necessary to our economic progress. Such privileges very naturally should only be accorded American-owned concerns, and co-operative ownership ef stock in competitive organizations muf-t obviously be proscribed. If the claims for superiority of American Roods are made aggressive realities and careful. direct and persistent efforts exercised by American manufacturers in their introduction and exploitation, it should not be difficult to make permanent our present pre-eminent position in world commerce. It appears that to advantageously maintain oi.r place in the international relat.ons, we need not only an efficient banking system and a well equipped merchant marine, but

more especiallj", scientific commercial education. It cannot be too strongly emphasized that these problems must be seriously taken under advisement, as a plain matter of modern development, requiring attention alon? feasible and intelligent line s. Viewing -he subject of business education from the standpoint of clear judgment, it becomes apparent that a necessity exists for training our j'oung element in the early stages of their development for business and labors which will devolve upon them when at manhood they enter The business world today is vitally interested in this problem, for no organization can succeed in a material degree whose workers are not efficient. The foundation of national prosperity clear! v rests upon tlt

"Electricity

Saved

Me

1 rum 1 aiiurc

3

Higher wages anj Porter hours, together with keen competition on prices, had me with my back to the wall just a. year ago. Then I began buying my Power from the Indiana & Michigan Electric Company, and now competition does not worry me.

as mv reduced operating cost

leave a good margin of prolit. Yes, 1 get my power from the

I

e

& M.

Bell 462.

Ml w

Home 5462

THE

NOTICE TO

PUBLIC Beginning Monday, Jan. 29th, a tripper will be operated on the Lincoln Way West line as far as Allen St., on week days only. Leaving Center at 11:30 A. M., and every 15 minutes until 12:45 P. M. inclusive, and again from 5:30 P. M., and every 15 minutes until 6:45 P. M., inclusive, leaving Allen St. at 1 1 :37 A. M., and every 15 minutes untii 12:52 P. M., inclusive, and from 5:37 P. M. to 6:52 P. M., inclusive. Chicago, South Bend & Northern Indiana Ry. Co.

1

Save Your Money Your own money saved will make .you more money than any other investment you ran make. To those who are laving something aside for the future, which is coming rapidly your way, we offer the services of this strong bank. Come in and talk it over with us. It will cost ou nn tiling to try our plan. American Trust Company on Savings.

V tj th.

CREAM

Imparts a dlirate bl.wü

ana velvety ofrr.ei

e. corr r iexioa

e tr al cc

viccea

Mm

There's

not a particle

of grease of any kind in this smooth, bland massafre cream. Delightful to use? s there isnonc cf that muasiness which renders tho use of so many face creams objection

able. It is completely ab

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result accomplished by its people t serve real purposes in -ympathy with current industry, science and government. If we can en u r izr ( early, direct busine ss trail. ir.g. th" ' usefulness of the lopulace of our country will assure both trading power and wealth. The measure of suet ss to - hch we are entitled will largely d'-p'-r.d , upon our ability to meet, in orcan-i ized and scientific strength. thcompetition of foreign eontemio!-

arie?. li we are to become tne r.narclal center of the world and gain supremacy in international fao'e, v must make adequate preparation

1 til I r ULI liii. turrr- no t iiiu . I 06 ' VO ft"

well as assuming all their respond- ' ym t.

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The Farmers Securities Co. The Fanners Securities Company oilers the vap;e earner n plan ot savings that pays 4'"' interest while saving anj 6 interest tor a year tollowinc:.

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