South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 93, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 April 1917 — Page 6
Tt ii.Y i:yi:nin;, aphil 3. ii7.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
OUTH REND MEWS TIMES on U5, not for a month-not for three monihs-but al" 3 D 1 ' " 1 r,,i.,f n.ntiniinii! v xlnrp th InVint nf thp Fusitania:
M ' ) r n i n z I ; v e n i n c S u n d ay . JOHN IIKNIIY ZFVFR. Editor. flABKini, I:. SI'MMBRS. Publisher.
ONI.Y A I ATM) riff MOHMNT. lUANflfl' I'U'Mt I.N MIHTIII UN IMINA AM ONI.Y I'AI'KR KM' '"IM, TU. INTKKN.UlONAIi 'KV ÜKRUK N Ol Til Itf.M ., , tt.-r r. 'w: :r T in t!;f Plate prtecle I y tij u !., c!r- rdgf.t and iLir-ri''' nni''; nl only ;.:M-.--..biii:n r,a-.r In t.t outnide I nllw:.. p.il. l'ublUii'-U vry ilij- ,,f t;1(. t. ,r jtI1j tttj, (. ,,,, hjj ,i,,yB Px,rit Sunday und IIii!iys i;;itT(! nt tl.e South lbnd oJIi'? us second ;.ua lu ii!.
disregarding her promise., misleading or trying to mis-
' lead us, prev arlcating, resorting to all the trickeries
open to conception pretending friendship, ye, but always with a clenched .1st, ready to strike your Uncle Samuel a Mow In the face. And Uncle Samuel has stood it altout as Ions as a self-respecting man can. His rase placed congress, in tin of the most remarkable messages known to American congressional history, has brought ready response. President and people are united to do the congressional will.
Here's a Model of Backyard Gardens An Eastern City
THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
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r ancy
Shoes
THL: NEWS-TI V.liS PRINTING COMPANY otTi 2V) W. Colfax Av.
Home I'lmnr JI31
Ciii nt th 'fTif i.r te!pline above numbers and nk for if I- irtn.nt w nnb IMif rial. Advrtiainsr. lr upctlon, r A--.:ir;tiu,r. K..r "want lt" if v..ir U In the tph-uJ J!r-fry. Mil will . ..ii.-.J if';.r lii-rtin. Iteport hiHttcn'.'n to hu Iti' h. bad -f. ii t ion. poor delivery d papers. lj Ij'i.-m- -ri !--. t-. t-. !. id i f d partm-nt ltli wldch y-n irt- d-al.fr '1 - s- lim. Iiis 1 1 1 1 r T 1 1 trunk Uu, all of wLl. h IV,. ..nd t. 11"!;;.- lh ii- ll.'l .ui.l lb ll loi-
THE SIDE OF THE PACIFIST. Since TacM.n" Alexander Uannwart of Hoston, and I Sen. Henry Cabot I-odue of Massachusetts, wound up ,
Iirll riione 21 ' their bout at the national canitol. Monday, with "I'aci-
ttst" Hannwart Retting somewhat the hest of It, except j for the police. It has sort of mellowed us, and we are ;
-but
M"liriUl'TION liTI: Morning nn.l I nins Kdltlon. i
i'!i Copy. Sunday. .Morning or llvenini; IMltlon. daily, in. indlntr Sunday, bv m ill. $ I '-r j:ir In ndvau'-e. I;-Uvf-r-l I.y .-irrl.r In Soti't !4 l'.t-nd and MliLiwuka. W-W) per Kr in a Ivan ur l.- bv il- - k.
AIVKKTIIN'i ICAT: Ask tl.- ad vrtllnff dnartniont J""r ''n Adv. rtiMiiu' Knprt. ntatlvt - : ( M I.OHI.NZKN &. WOUJ. MAN. L'.T. llftl. Ar. Nu York City und Adv. IU1' hi ;i ir. 1 'he Nw-s-Tim n!.-avors t. kf-p its dTPrtllfJ "hiiim fri-. from f raiidub-nt m.r'pi ?-u t itin. Any perso.i d f ra li'b-.l through patronnt'- f any M!vtrtiHinent in thla p.pr will onf'-r a favor .n the uan.ij;euient bj rt-portlnf; thn l.M.-ts compl.dfly.
APRIL 3, 1917.
WE HAVEN'T HYDROPHOBIA. And now the German othcial announcer even brags ni'oat the torpedoing of a hospital ship, and the Urltish threaten reprisals. We ropectfulb äre the Urltish to hold hack their i eprisaH. We expect t shortly into this war, somewhere, and i-robably in close relations with the Hritish. We want to ,ro in as human beings, with the fear of the l)id in our hearts, and some regard for honor, morality and civilization. We don't want to become "made log" as n means of putting down '"mad doggery". We don't want to poison wells, bomb school rooms, saw off fruit trees, carry off maidens, enslave nonomhatants. blow up passenger ferries, drown sick and wounded, or butcher helpless captives in cold blood, as a matter of reprisal, or for any other reason. We still are so old fashioned as to ee a difference between honorable warfare and deliberate, premeditated murder with malice aforethought. We. one time, hanged your MaJ. Andre, not in reprisal for the execution of our Nathan Hale, but in xpiation of the legitimate penalties of civilized warfare, and we cannot endorse any new rule prescribing murder of innocent, helpless captives. We'll kill the eiieim with all the power the Kord gives us. hut we will ii.d butcher helpless captives, or sink hospital ships, in order to match the harharism of the German au-tcr;;ey.
PRESIDENT WILSON'S MESSAGE. In what history will no doubt regard one of the most reinarkat.le state papers thus far known to our national life. I'res t Wilson, addressing congress again -sterday, placed before that body and the country, his iew of the international situation; of our relations to Germany, und Germany's attitude toward us, together with his recommendations, it is no longer armed neutrality for which he pleaded. The Tilibusterers" of the last congress have 'sinned awaj their day of grace," tending comfort and encouragement to Germany, by apparently dividing the country on that score. Germany has nccordlriKly moved on with even more frlghtfu ness than Lofore. apparently depending upon a diw led Ame rica to back her Tip in her cussedness, and it rr.nains to be seen if the new congress, as at present iii.nle up, will be as subservient to the kaiser's lash.
beginning, perhaps as a matter of self-security
beginning, to study the "pacifist" side. (
And we are studying It all over the country; east and west, north and Bouth, center and circumference, inside and out, top and bottom frinstants: We're agin that movement in the California essemMy to repudiate David .-'tarr Jordan, who Is for peace, first, last, any price, fitting, standing or lying down, and chronically advertising it. Such as Dr. Jordan Is a necessary counter-irritant. He should not be squelched, even If he could be, which h can't. Wouldn't these be monotonous war
roaring for blood, in every Issue, and no Jordan weeping and wailing for the opposite, by telegraph and telephone and pamphlet and newspaper column? Let David alone! He has a mission. He's representing free speech and free speech has its blessed features, whether it comes from oft a soap box or only a college president's chair. We feel about the same on this subject as we do with reference to the Washington police putting the kibosh on that "pacifist" parade that was to have taken place at the capital Monday. It should have been allowed to proceed, to the end of preventing that fight between .Sen. Lodge and Mr. "Pacifier" If nothing more. Besides a parade is a neat, and more or less proper and harmless way, in which to work off what folks have in them. It is a fashion of folks who are full of some sort of strong sentiment to get up a procession, or organize a society. This country has got more societies to th . square acre than any other on earth, or than any other that history tells of. When a fellow gets the idea that he knows a lot about something, he goes to organizing it, and feels better. His light Is no longer under a bushel and he publicly stands for something, which is a justifiable pride. You can't throw a stone twenty feet, nowadays, without hitting some promoter of the conservation of frog's eggs, or some other uch concern. There's advantage in It, too. The rubbing together of different sets of brains produces higher human neutrality, even when the association of brains doesn't lay many strictly fresh eggs. These peace-first people at Washington would have shown the president that the country wants peace, a matter about which there's no
question, same as there is no doubt but the country wants heaven and other good things. That they. could not shonv hirn what more he could do to preserve peace, or specify t?rms under which continued peace would be wrong, doesn't matter. Still, the parade would have pleased the president as an endorsement of the lengths to which he has gone to maintain the peace. Parading, like organizing societies, Is a real fine way of working off the pressure you have assumed and we wanted to see everybody in that Washington procession wearing good clothes and keeping step to the fife and drum, or the mouth organ, if fife and drum are too warlike.
SEED SHOWERS FOR SOLDIERS. Toronto is said to be giving seed potato showers for
the families of Its soldiers. The gardening committee
The president's aJdress last night placed square be-! of the thrift organization hopes to get around the prices
fore congress and the nation, at least where he stands, ami what, in his judgment, the nation ought to do. His position, as taken, that a state of war already exits as between Germany and America, with Germany the aggressor, may not be to the full satisfaction of Chancellor von Dethmann-HoUweg the kaiser's official liar. but the vast majority of Americans will choose the light thrown upon It by the president, and we anticipate that congress will take early and a somewhat similar notice. As between IJethmann-Hollwes's address in the roichstag. and Prcs't Wilson before congress, congress
of seed potatoes, now almost prohibitive to the small gardener. This committee ib asking citizens to contribute seed potatoes for use by soldiers' families in back yard gardens. It doesn't matter how small the quantity if the seed Is sound and good. Many churches In the city will be used as distributing centers. The seed will be collected there and given out by the Vacant Lot Garden association. In this way many small plots of ground will be planted v ith potatoes that otherwise would be left unproductive. These many small gardens will not only help families to be self-supportlnv; while their men aro
seems to kree with the president. Hollweg's assertion
. .. . v , i .u !at the front, but they will add not Inconsiderably to the that Germany ncwr had the slightest intention of at- J J
tacking the United States, and does not have such in
tention now," may be good "dope" for the chancellor to hand to the Germans, but as the president analyzes what Germany has been doing, Americans know better. When Germany sank the Lusitania. slaughtering more than ICO American citizens, she had no intention of attacking us. we suppose?
total potato crop. And the potato crop needs all the
boosting it can get.
FINANCIAL READINESS. The latest report of the comptroller of the United States treasury shows that we are now at the apex of our financial strength, and incomparably stronger than
I any other nation. The assets of our national banks ag-
When she killed several scores of other American j ß'egate more than $16,000,000,000. That is more than
citizens, at various times and places in the past two j J5.000.000.000 in exces of the combined resources of
years; she didn't mean any offense? It was just one of her little Prussian ways. Nations, like Individuals. hae their foibles.
And likewise when Germany inspired and hnancec
a treat, hostile campaign In this country for the perversion of puMie ('pinion, the blowing up of factories, warehouses and ships, the breaking of our laws and defiance of our neutrality: she didn't mean any harm? When she tried t persuade Mexico and Japan to join her in making war against us; that was only another little Prussian whims. c. lity ? When she ordered our commerce ofr the sea, and proceeded to blow up all ships ignoring the command; that was an act of disinterested friendship, was it?
the bank of Lngland, the bank of France, the Kelchs-
bank of Germany, the bank of Italy, the bank of Spain,
I the bank of Norway, the bank of Sweden, the Swiss
j : National bank, the National bank of Denmark and the
bank of Japan. Thanks to our new regional banking system, these stupendous resources can be easily mobilized, it is inconceivable that, even in a war that reckons its expenses in units of billions, any financial need will arise that cannot be promptly met. In this one respect,- at least, we are thoroughly prepared.
The chancellor adds that "Germany never desired war
and
A BILLION FOR FRANCE. The slogan. "Give $1.000,0.00,000 to France", is meeting with a surprising response throughout the country.
against the Pnited Xtatos.
(if eour.-e not: Germany
does not desire it to-J and is likely to make a big noise in congress w hen It
oay. (if course not. nermany never desired war mees. And sometning more than noise ought to result
against lb'I.gium or Frame They were simply so stu- J from it. We owe France that billion dollars for her ptd as t imagine they had Veen attacked, and so fool- nifts and services to us. Why not pay It? She helped
ih as to ftht back. Wh can't we be sensible about it? Minply because s;n 'i "sensibility" would 1 e the "sensi ihty" of (.. wards, submissive idiots, boughten or kinship traitors. .f ele fo.ds. The president lias made this plain, not by saving it. but b suppivi:. the data from which it is easy for sane Americ.ir s to reason it thus; Americans, of course, w h can think first w ithout f.rst consulting Chancellor von iiethiiitttiii-lli'ii'V t , Germany's official liar. The
use to free ourselves from Lngland. Why not help her now to free herself from Germany? Thus we should pay a debt, promote a noble cause and sere ourselves. y0r France is fighting our battle, and every dollar pxpended directly for trance will serve as good a military purpose as if we added it to our funds for military preparations at home.
president ha t;i w .th Gvrmaa.y. b,
e it plain, not that we are at war that Germany ha been making war
Massachusetts' senate asks the supreme court to decide whether women are "people". If not, will the court pleac decide what they are?
For the benefit of South Bender enlisting in the backyard and vacant lot garden movement The News-Times is conducting this department with the co-operation of the National Emergency Food Garden commiseion, which is affiliated with the conservation department of the American Forestry association with headquarters In Washington, D. C. The advice is surpervised by experts of the department of agriculture. Charles Lathrop Pack of Lakewood, N. J., president of the commission, and other members are Dr. Charles W. Eliot, John Grier Hibben of Princeton, James Wilson, former secretary of agriculture; Luther Uurbank. John Hays Hammond, Carl Vrooman, assistant secretary of p-gricuiture, A. W. Shaw, Capt. J. 11. White, U. S. shipping board; Emerson MacMillan, Fairfax Harrison, president Southern railway. Watch this column and follow it closely in planning your garden. Questions that may not be covered in the advice will be answered If written on one side of the paper and addressed to the Garden Editor The News-Times.
I interviewed old Mlllionbones and asked him how he got What all the people in our town regarded us a lot. Said. he: "My boy, I never am in such a hectic haste That I would let a -imple pin lie down and go to waste. I pick up each one that I see, and there's the truthful rale of how I came to be the bos., of all my splendid kale." I interviewed old Killionbeans Hnd asked him for a speech On what it was that brought such scads cd" coJn within his reach. Said he: "1 learned in early life how much my time was worth And when I saw a pin I left it lying on the earth; For one would have to labor with rapidity and power To pick up three cents' worth of pins in less than half an hour." So there you are and here I am and thus the tale is told How Mlllionbones and Pillionneans acquired their leads of gold. The moral is quite obvious and heartening and bright You cannot possibly go v. rong when either way is right; On rinding- pins you pick them up or leave them where they are And either way you get as rich as Carolina tar. -Arthur Brooks Baker.
In 26 Different Patterns
All White Cloth (Like Cut) Also Low Heel
SI. 8
The department of agriculture has found In one of our eastern cities a back yard garden which it regards as a model. This back yard is of a wind typical in cities which built houses on narrow frontages with common side walls, the houses being open to the air only in front and back. This particular house occupies the total frontage of a lot 2 5 feet wide. Hehlnd the house is a yard extending back 70 feet to an alley. In the rear of the yard is a small tool shed, 5 by 10 feet In dimensions. The alley is cut off from the yard by a tight board fence, and the sides of the yard, from the house to the alley, are also bounded by fences of the same sort. The owner of this property has laid the back yard off as a permanent garden. The side fences has made to act as trellises for grape vines, having 14 of these vines planted at 10-foot Intervals. Down each side of the yard, parallel to the side fences and four feet away from each run valks, two and a half feet wide, from the house to the alley, one of the walks and turning around the shed to meet the other walk at the extreme rear of the yard.
In the space between the walks, a space 12 feet wide, is the vegetable garden proper. The owner, however, does not give up his back yard entirely to the garden. Immediately behind the house between the two walks Is a concrete pavement five feet wide and running back from it a grass plot 13 feet long and 12 feet wide (the distance between the walks). This gardener has hordered the two walks on both sides with strawberry plants, having over 100 such plants, sufficient to give him an abundance of strawberries in season. Between the strawberries and the grapevines on the fence he has set out 16 current bushes at 10-foot intervals. Between the current bushes he finds room for various sets of beans, egg-plant and the like, which make an attractive backyard for the walks. In the rear of the yard, opposite the shed, he has made his permanent asparagus bed in a space three by seven feet.
The rest of the garden is given over to close-crrowing. low and quick-maturing vegetables, such as radishes, beets, lettuce, carrots, parsnips, peas, onions and beans. He finds room for .10 rows of these, each row nearly 12 fot long. Although in a northern climate, this gardener succeeds in making his ground produce two crops each year. When the early pens are gathered he plants more early peas and kale in thir rovvs. The late peaa have no successor crops, but there were onlv two rows of late peas, against six rows of the other variety. The onion sets, when pulled, are succeeded by tomato vine, trained a dozen plants about a single stem. Among th" tomatoes, spinach, which can be gathered until snowflies and after that. Is planted Two crops of beans, early and late, are grown In four rows, with winter onions growing among the late bean plants. Two crops of carrot are produced on two rows, while four rows of beets later give way to cabbage. Iettuce and parsnips and radishes sown In close rows In the rear of the garden, produce second crops and alo provide space for some late beans. This garden produces nearly all it owners food needs during a larrr portion of the yer. The department of agriculture advises home gardeners to stury this model and adapt Its methods to their own spaces.
BOYS AND ClUU S. A boy's curiosity is directed to the ice box: a girl would like to see whnt Is In the top bureau drawer. A girl can give the impression whn away from home that her pnrenfs nre wcalthv; a boy r.innot. Every boy is old enough to be welcome to sit in th neighbor girl's parlor many years before hi sisf r thinks he 1 old enou-'h to sit in the parlor at homo. Give a t-nv a dollnr and h will ent It; hi? sister one and she will wear It. A brother nnd siter may hav hair of the ame had. but th v.nv' is called red and the giil p
PATRIOTS AND PATRIOTS. By James J. Montague You are sure that Trick, the lawyer, will be foremost in the throng Where the words are breaking wildly and the tide of talk runs strong. You can find him on the platform, bravely shouting every night That the duty of the nation Is to hustle out and fight. And you wonder, as the thunder of his phrases fills throom. If he'll have his rifle with him when the guns begin to boom. You are sure that Smooth, the banker, will advise his employes That they ought to be enlisting in exciting times like these. You will find him every morning on the commutation train Telling his admiring seatmate that the nation's course is plain. And you wonder, as you hear him. just how fir away he'll be When the first 12-inch projectile hurtles in across the sea. You are sure that Jor.es and Judson. Smith and Dobson, Green and Brown, Who are doing little talking as they travel round the town. Will not rave about their duty or exhort the men next door To put on their coats and ulsters and go forth and start the war. But you know the course exactly that these quiet chaps will take. They'll go out and fight like wildcats when the trouble starts to break.
m Novelty Boots
Of All Kinds and Docription PRICED
1 $2.48 to $3.98
if I " I
t
l Slippers
We nre showing some v ery pre tty ones, either .-traj'S or plains, at
$1.98
The Safest Way. There ;s so much and such continuous trouble on the Mexican border that we may be compelled to abolish it before very Ion?:. o Kart Achievement. If the czar has any idea of coming back he can gain valual.de information by communicating with Jim Jeffries and T. Boosevelt, somewhere in America. o Walch Your Fingers, I'ucle Sam. The allies' chestnuts are in an exceedingly hot fire. o Some cf 'Fin Do. "The fellow," says a Y. M. C. A. director, "who goes about with his nose in the air will make good." Possibly, but there is always a chance that he'll try to follow his nose and go up in the air himself. o Astonishing lYoperty of Prunes. Whiskey is made in Maine from prunes, we learn from our perusal of the general information column. Having seen some of Its effects on the Portland waterfront we always supposed that the Maine distillers made it out of nitro-glycerine.
Trouble Afler Trouble. The Philadelphia Evening Ledger warns us that in wartime we must safeguard our fish supply. This means that just when we need all our destroyers for defense we shall have to send out a lot of them to convoy the mackerel and codfish schools. o Bone Dry. The bar of the senate, to which Mr. Mitchel has been summoned, is a misleading term. All the booze in the capitol is kept in the committee rooms. o Almost Too Muc h to IIie For. There are "0 editors ii the new congress, so hereafter there ought to be a little punch in the congressional record. o ick Heins Anions the letter. Some men are born with crowns; some achieve crowns, and some have crowns knocked off of them. Hani Luck. The price of honey has gone up. and at present prices it wouldn't help any to train the bees to use i rubber combs.
HI Spring Shoes and Oxfords for Men in all styles $1.98 to $2.98 HI Misses White Top Button Shoes jj Our Price $1.98 j Specials for Wednesday Only
5oo pairs Ladies' broken lots in Shoes, Pumps and Oxfords, mostly small sizes, S3.5( no
500 pairs Men's AllWhite Short Rubber Boots, CI 00
83.50 values.
Better Shoe", and Belter Soriv
values .
G. R. Kinney Co. I ncorporated. wu-xii i waym: st.
Tlio SI ore That Offer You More
:.l
Inklings and Thinkings
By Wex Jones
Boston reports an excessive supply of haddock. Feed them to the codfish.
Proposed to have every cat wear a bell around its neck so that it can't I sneak up mi birds. This will give anentirely new meaning to pussyfoot- : ing. !
At that, some husbands come home with bells on.
.Japan Is buying a Chinese island. No; not from China, from Portugal.
Famous alibis: Military necessity.
Wisconsin man was sentenced to a month in the kitchen of his home. He won't take up much room in the kitchen when his wife is cooking the dinner, we'll bet
Craze for backyard farms will lead many persons to learn with surprise that potatoes don't grow on trees.
Somebody dopes out prunes as a ctire for hay fever. Hay fever's not exactly pleasant, but
The formerly well known Nicholas Romanoff is very fond of flowers, but at present has landed in the cactus.
Just now tho man with the hoe is the man with the dough.
Professor says rice is not a fighting diet. Isr.'t it used at weddings?
A Real Railroad There are noro trains on tho South Shore Lines between South Bend. Michigan City, clary and Chicago than on any other road. The service is courteous. ef!i tetit. ci.-an. c omfortable and punctual. Passengers for Chicago anive al the best part of the city over the main line of th Illinois Central Railroad, at Sixty-third. Fifty-third. Forty-third. Twelfth. Van Buren and Randolph .Street Stations. Fse the Klectric Way between Chicago. Pullman, Kensington. Hegewisch. Burnham, Hammond, Fast Chicago, (lary. Miller, Michigan City. Hudson I, ike. New Carlisle and South Bend. Complete Freight service also, with standard railroad equipment and prom'rt deliveries at all points on our lines. For full Information consult an ti ket auent or 1 1. ;. FAlTHnRN. Traffic Manager, Michi-'an City, Indiana.
stw fcJBw mt m m. i m V rat li Til n inn r f T i m i i nr -1 tun m n I
'
sc
Japanese missionaries are coming here to. teach Shintoism. Hope the shinto is more musical than the ukelele. :
S
Muddy shoes are a surer sign of spring than any fool robin.
Venezuelan turtles, it Is said, will lay their eggs only when the constellation of the southern cross Is high in the heavens. Some New Jersey hens must be awaiting the same sign.
ONCE- OVERS
Mr. Husband, what did you gain by that squabble you had with your wife yesterday evening? Suppose she did keep you waiting a few moments when you were koing to the theater, perhaps she did something which displeased you. but have you not often done things which you knew annoyed her. and she did not speak her mind? Not a very f.t closing for an otherwise happy, comfortable day. Why, how would you feel If she berated you every time you are late for meals? You would not stan! for it if she dictated ev ery time you should make a personal expenditure, would you? Now. old man. get right down to brass tacks with yourself. Hid not your wife h eve good reason for being peeved last night, and was she not quite right In saying to you what she did? You thcught anger w ould cover your guilt, and you talked in such a mean way that she finally became really angry and told you a fewfacts you know they were facts. Makes you feel a little ashamed, doesn't it. when you think it ever. Next time admit your mistake at the beginning and you'll be far happic r. CoDvripht inn International News Service.)
: jum'- r.- -
A Wired Home is within the reach of all No matter ho-sv small ana lrxpcnsivc your home, you can pive yourself all xhi conveniences and comforts of the most costly residcnfcs at surprisingly small cost. You can wire a single room if you wish your living room for the convenience of electric iisht, your kitchen fur the use of labor savins house hold helps, or any room you may designate. The charge depends absolutely upon how much you wish done. There are thousands of low-priced three- and four-room cottages in this country wired for electricity Klectric light costs but one-tenth what it did twenty-five years ago Need you deny yourself this greatest of all comforts? Ask us for a fric on jour requirements I. & M.
Bell 462
Home 1 197
