South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 335, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 December 1917 — Page 4
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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND REYS-TIPIES
gh: 1 r
being poinJ by sj.ies. it is somethi ng to be thou
about and thought about with ces op-n ra'.her than
Morninr livening Sunday. I toiktei about w it ii fjps shut, .south Demi is not ad-
NEWS-TIMiiS PRINTING CO.. Publishers. : -rtiii.j for a panic nor for a stampede. "Keep a D. it- 5nifrr-x t i Trr.tivvsfiv Manner. ! I'-vH head." said I'p s t Wilson early in the var, and
JOIIN HKNilY ZUVKK. Mltor.
0?r Attxrlati rr- Mominc l"pr lr Northern Indiana J 0!r I'ptr r.mp!olo the I nt-rnatlonal S-trictj ta uth IJniJ Ino ibe-at-rd Vlrt: ly .ni Msbt.
Vom Thon 1I5L.
Uffl : 21 J W. Cctfai At.
BU I'boue 2100.
CaJl "i ttie otTlre or trpbone nV-iT camber and sk fr lf?artmnt wnted Kdtton.'J. AdTtrthiriZ. Cirrulrtion. or AfvnatlDf For int f-.it." If your mm In the te.pbon Jlrt-.ry. bill ni;l b nullM ufff-r iunrtin. Irrt Inattention ta bailout. fa i ex- utlr-c, poor eM'.Tcrj ct rarer, bad tp-'ephon r7W. et. to Lend of department with which you ire Mailar. TL News-Time km thirteen trunk lint-. All of Licfc t'.tnl tu Ihn: i Lone and 1!: 21oU
smsrr.irrioN ktk:
bl?.g)9 Copj. 2; Snniaj. :; Morning or Kvt-nhig IMltlon.
incJudiFf Srmdiy. by mall. f'iO'J r"'' rr a i"11 lMlTtreJ by carrier in South I'.enl and Mlihawaka. V.oV Pr Lar In adran. or 17c ty tue week. Entered at tbe Souta
AnVT.RTlsiNO RAT KS t Ak the adTrt:!r.sr !er.irtmnt Ftreln AeWertlAing KepreaeatatlT : Oi.NE. LORKNZF.V tt WOUO.NLVN. 21.-. Fifth At.. .Spw York City, and Adr. Hid. ChVigo. Tie New-Tim- en Invc rn to keep It itdvertlsinj rolaraua tr from fraudulent :nireprc entation. Any peraoa frauJ?d tbroufb patroaatf t-f any advertisement In thta paper U1 rotifer a favur ;u the lujujgemeut by reporting ti latla tompletelj.
UtiCL:MHiK 1, 1917.
THE WHOLli WOHLD ON THL JOB. .Nearly the whoU- iiliz-d urhl is t-xpt ri-rn.int; an. educational upheaval. I'rom a va'ue unrest has deeloped the i -ilizatiori that sound duc ation is nece.stary to thu further progress of rivilizwtion, and that 27:any of th- furnier s. stems of t-ducation have been Unsatihfaetor . The war forced homo to Knpland and yrance the need for elueational reform. Our own Americanization probkni Ls only one jhase of the newly felt need for a more general and thorjuu'h educational t ytent in this country that will rea h every citizen. The uprooting of old and Inefficient methods i.s not ( onliru-il to the w extern hemisphere with it western t ivilizution. The orient has felt the need for a bigger, t etter educational btem. I r. Othima. a profe.-sor i'i the University of Tokio. Iki, expressed the Japanese feeding and perhaps the world feeling. His country has been t.i narrow in its educational purposes, he be!iecy. It tan no longer '; content with trying to make Rood Japanese citizens simply. It must teach its hoys and girls "to he exemplary citizens of the orld." IMwcation is Mie ,iu'-;et force of democracy. In makirit; th worhl afe for democracy wo must make it r-'Miml in education. Th' re ;re a Kod many problemö t no lac-tl ri'ht now. military and ko ern mental and ocia! r.ut the educational pro'deni is far from the least of thevo. and it is none too soon for the whole vnrM t et dortii to th serious business of its solution.
it is ood advice still. War is a name. This war is a iMtne in which everybody mu.-t pay a part. Who "er heard of a sport putting oer anything very meritorious by losing his head? There H a theory, and this too quite practical, In peace times, that hy keeping the puhlic well-informed it tan he made a part of the public service, and on that theory the public might he taken generally into th con.'idence of the city officials on this water question but we are at war, and if theie be enemies in our (amp, ou can't very well keep the public generally informed without keeping the enemies on guard also. That is: why we have a press censorship in war times; voluntary censorship in the main, ia this country, but censorship just the same, and a patriotic censorship all the more. However, now that the cat. if it be a cat," is out of the l ag. we suppose that about the best thing that the public tan do is to keep its eyes and ears open, and watch for the cat, if it be a cat.
CHAOS. Most of the accounts describing recent conditions in Russia have made free use of the terms "anarchy" and "chaos," and many readers may have imagined a state of utter confusion; with the orderly processes of industry and commerce stopped, with crime and starvation rampant; with the nation changed to a vast welter of aimless and helpless humanity; with public and private life broken down and nothing going on as usual. And if so, the readers have probably been about 2'i percent wrong. For tl.ngs don't happen that way. A rational correspondent of the New York Times writes, from amiJ the supposedly hopeless chaos of Petrograd. "Life Koe.s on in an unintelligible way, defying bold plots and amazing negations, cheating all prophets and baffling all calculations. Trains still inn, the electric light still burns, tradesmen still hand over goods In return for scraps of paper that are railed money, and even the postman does his daily round." It's the way with mankind. Uvcn amid the terrors
and confusion of the French revolution, if we look in- ing- for a Y
to calm histories of that event, we lind the bulk of the population of Paris, right In ihr vortex of it, eating and sleeping and working and buyinff and selling and marrying and dying naturally in their beds, to a surprising degree. Any revolution is more talk than anything else.
The Public Pulse
C'ommunlration for this o!irran may t !j;n"1 anonymously bot must tx hc.-ornpanled bf the name o the writer U 1 nun re ffond faith. No r. pflrdllty for fats or ut1mnt. exprw-d ill he spumed. Honet duussion of puMir quetln in lnritM. bet with th right reserved to eliminate vlitin and objectionable mattor. The column It free. But, be reasons tie.
THE MELTING POT
Come Take Pot Lack With Us1
Kditor News-Times: An incident that shows the alue of the war work which the government has placed in the hands of the Young Women's Christian association comes to us from Klkhart. A young man enlisted in the army in a Pacihc state and, whiie there in training learned of the ready service given by the Y. W. C. A. to all relations of the soldiers. When the time came for him to leave for France he wrote to his mother that his train would stop briefly in Flkhart, Ind., the nearest point V ":er home in northern Michigan He told her of his great longing to see her and speak with her once more before he went out on the long, perilous adventure of war. he was not used to travel but with a mother's love anil courage she took the long journey to the strange town ami had just four minutes time to talk with her son. only four minutes, but worth all the trouble, the expense, the planning, a thousand times over. The Klkhart Y. W. C. A. received the ired. little woman, kept her over night anil saw her on the home-bound train at 1 a. m. the next day. Somewhere on another train hurrying east, a young soldier's mind was easy, for his mother was receiving the attention she needed as kindly given as if he had been able to render it himself. That's why the boys aie hop-
W. C. A. hostess house
NO LACK OF INFORMATION.
half
are
They say that half the world does not know how the other
exists, Hut that's a proverb on the sacred truth of which no man insists. The rich folks scout among the poor, investigate the lowly slums And nose about the habitat of orphans, widows, tramps and bums. They help uplift the working man with prayers and pamphlets and advice And many large societies to buy his heated children ice.
The poor can spend a coprer cent and read with unrestraint d
delight What Mrs. Uallapop had on at Mrs. Yanderw hoop s last nig-U. Descriptions of the wedding gifts when golden unions
performed. Descriptions of the food and drink with which exalted guests are w armed. Description, of the cars and dogs, the lingerie and furniture The poor are given ample means to keep quite well informed. I'm sure. Th trouble is we kAou too a ell how others live in stle and state. And tradesmen tell us it is what we ought to try to imitate. The poor are mad because they're poor, the rich because they are not happy. The social lines are breaking down and every one is cross and snappy. The man who said we do not know was either dense or very Dutch; We all know how the others live we know, alas, by far too much! Arthur" Brooks Uaker
Si
uiTi.i; iM)iti;n:s p.. liv William V. Kirk.
in every cantonment. i:mma burxktt hakims
GIfTTING TOGLTHLR. It was a graceful little speech that Lloyd (leor,;lnade in honor of the American commissioners nt tho Internationa! war conference in historic Downing st: "It i. a coulee of ureal satisfaction to my , oib-.igues and invsilf that this gathering of two nations now qn,ill educated to the ommn tak cf def, i ding the liberties of the world should take pl.n-o in the cry room i i which the statesmen of earlier and less enlightened period committed the blunders which had estranged them." It was indeed in that ery room that the prime min i.-dcr of a half-crazy ' C.erman king" committed tho tvrannnal and v. nsta tesma n Ii ke acts which drove tho American colonies to ''elhon ami independence. The most enlightened British statesmen of that time recognied that the colonies were right, and did not fear to defy their usurping government and declare tho truth before parliament. Th'-y pointed out that tho colonists vcre merely it .-sorting the traditional rights of Unghshmen. All 1 !n u hsh m-ri who know anvthing at all now ac cept that v i w as a matter of course. And the Friti-h gowrnmeiu and public alike now typify th same spirit which animated the American revolutionists in 1775. That's wh w e along 0 , PmI.ij with our tra ditional enemies, whom our school histories have rather o er-z-alosjsly taught u- to fear and hate. We our-svlvr-hive bad a new i.irth of freedom, and the l'.fithh hav e a i!u up w ith u-.
f, I f Oiher Editors Than Ours
ON
snooTiNii oNirs D.r;irn:ii. (New York i:cnlng JIal )
KLl LADING Till: CAT IH IT Bli A CAT. It ocnrs to us that it is. about time to get off of ties " mdr-uif talk about tlerman spies or pro-(Ierinanisni being resj.or.sibb- for the condition of the South IJena water iuppl ; this, even though it be true. Why put tt into the Ik ad of some i ri t sjM.nsiido crank ta indulge in .ome such tntcrpiis. : We cannot object to Mayor Keller or S.:j t. T" n of the water department having some fcuch idea m th. ir head, but they ought to keep it there, or at !eat. not gi e it out for publication. No harm, wc would s-iv, in letting o eri reporters ku.iw what is in their minds, ;illt better e onfde nt ially. as conti rn the public. a nd news editors muht to be taught 1 otter judgment than to lot such matter s!ij a ro-s their desks, m.ere than once. Yes-, b t the reporters kr.ow. am! !- t the press kno'.v confidentially and with eon'idem e requested, or no. tho newspaper- have grown t.ll- habitual in keeping such things under their hats pi the-- latter dus. They sup-
Down on Stiiten Island, on Sunday, there was enacted a little tragedy that should make men think. A man tried to kill his child, failed, and killed himself. He was no maniac, just & victim of the economic system in which we live, a system of "the devil take the hindmost." When sickness came upon him. he was one of the hindmost. So the devil took him. His name was Thomas N whort and his daughter Amies was ten years old. Ho told her in the early morning tha if it wasn't for leaving her alone in the worhl. he would end it all. She was frightened. So later, when she saw him taking something gleaming from his bureau drawer, she tied from the room. He fired t.vo shots after her, but missed. He had decided not to leave her alone in the world. When she came hack with a policeman, her father was clTad. The steers on the plain, the bees in the hive, the ants in the hill, all stand together. It is the wolves in the pack who turn upon a fallen comrade ami rend him. Is modern society much better than that? Thomas Nevvhort had fallen victim to rheumatism, which had compelled him to give up his business. A year ago he tried to commit suicide by gas. Ho gave the last warning of distress, but the aid did not come. Surrounded by demonstrations of the vast organize! power of society, he was left an unorganized individual to light alone- at a time when his earning power was gone. In the blackness of despair, in the abyss of want, he was told ti struggle with disease alone. Think of the mighty power t light disease- .which
i we possess today, snail tnat power be available only
for the wealthy classes? ISaths and s-ientifu treatment vvouhl have- restored Thomas Nevvhort to health. It we ni hi have given him his courage hack, his earning power. Agnes would have grown uj in a. home-, with a father to guide her. The treatment which Thomas Neshirt needed should have been his and not out of charity. It should have boon his as a rightful return tor the- contributions which he. in his earning days, made- for a seial insuram-e fund designed to care for just such things. Not only Thomas Nevvhort h.i.s failed. You and I and all who might to have been irgaruzei te help him we alse have faileei. The social organization has failed. Is it not time for us to drojt this eltish laissez-faire policy of "the devil take the hindmost?" If we have net le-adership capable of rising to meet these problems, the leadership wo have will bo repudiated like so many leaders of th.- past. The cruelty of this social order turned Thomas Newholt's love for his daughter into attempted murder. He-cause he loved her, he chose not to leave her alono in the world he was voluntarily quitting. If we are not careful, other natural sentiments will be turned into their opposite in men of Thomas Newhort's class. Dove of eountry, belief in leaelership. trust in religion will be turned into a tierce and active resentment against a system which treats the worker like an orange tt be sucked elrv and thrown asitle.
ich
press, about tw n o revvs. De-ides the
s-.ometiim They kr.ow th.i n ev n their editors
cooperating with the jd:.e
serv i .f J
th
e jrint.
:od wai
. i .
ni
r-pot tors are not such bad sleuth
a b't more about some thiols
ar.d the press ,,f the city, might be of e-onsiderable
in ferreting out things were it not for the lack ce eooperatiou and d ided buk of eoimnon
ser.se. on ovcastor.s uuine-roi.-.
f i ourse. on the ha .s of t!
pratnal. that "the less, ou i.'iow the-
) o'i know." it .s not to be expected that a police- de-partme-ut. which thinks it kno-s i? a'.' ni.iinly ! auc
ill ass. is going to e-nncode me possibiiitv
Knowing rnucn t": anymiug. i n:s ques-
obl theory, quite
mere vt;i umu
it is dumb as
of an von. else
Don of poisoned w.ite-r i one to be solvid by the police
!M.r'. t r i c e 'cnbelentiullv
W i :n
eiepelided
i(.!t .lid
upon.
of the pal
w e W nil
than ry a wh It-sale d;; tributu n
Jg.gestbui for indulge: nee.
f th,
lie .is ..tu be d say, rather idea with the
Ai fur our-the", w e
cranks" of mote misehief i'in to their
thi.-
v ith
a grain t sa'.
a..f mis o-e.Ci ...aoie'l
Ac ording to our guess, it Is
a t'o.-.s - tu en ibe present water (.Uli so- King to ge ;
;t front mi 1 r sp,.i-.s; ! i'.ity i.-r the eor.dition of the w.ite r, arid the r p ;1 liuui organ of the et admir.ist;;bn Ihre, .ving o .t the lifeline with a ha:t on it to tli-i
. ; i 1 1 ! . . to . i reseat one
t!ie water b.-.;i d that 1- to
tee
if it falls t.
1 : i.i . e aiiv
M KXICO ACSAIV. (Ditliana Time's.) Reports o a renewal of strife in Mexico are particuiarly ominous at this time, and if Gen. farranza is wise he will procecel vigorously against Yilla and his bantlits which wore reported Saturday te he encircling the city of Juarez, across the river from Kl Paso. For the United States will hardly feel inclined again to show the forbearance toward Mexico it displayed in the tlays when we were so assiduously attempting to keep out eif war with Germany, y-t never knowing the day when we would be compelled to enter that war. of course we do not wish to take any hostile action against Mexico now. The necessity of curbing theve unruly people would cause to bo eliverteel from the French front a considerable body of troops and we
need all the soidiers we can train to defeat Germany. Hut at the same time it may beeenne absolutely necessary to protect cur southern bonier and that protection may take the form ef punitive measures not only against Villa, but against Carrar.za as well. It's altogether probable that Vil a has secured outside assistance in this latest foray, and it is cxtremely improbable that this assistance has come from any other than German sources. We have known for a long time that Mexico was honeycombed with German agents. Many have tied to that country from the United States, especially since the declaration of war. and undoubtedly they have been active there. It is not unreaseinable to s pposo that they have aided Villa with counsel and with money and the result is apparent
i in the strengthening r his forces which makes his dem
onstration agair.st JiU'.rez possible. While certain German agents are working with Villa, others are surrtumding Carruma with poisonous counsel ami fe eding the t'.anie of Mexico's so-called injured pride to the end that a diversion may bo created that would
1 ihe ' re lound tt Germany's benefit. The United State s. for
tunately, is ably represented in Mexico City and if the
Indianapolis, Nov. 1017. Uelitetr News-Times: A state-wide war conference will be held in Indianapolis on Dec. DJ and II. This is in pursuance to suggestions originating in the council of national elefense and the committee on public information at Washington. It will be a most important occasion. The program is being completed and will consist f a mass meeting at Tewnlinsini hall at 2 o'clock on Thurselay afternoon, Dec. Dl, which will be addressed by a speaker of th - very highest national reputation direct fnmi the front. At this meeting also a member of the natiejnal council will speak -who will be able to give in detail the lefense program. Date that afternoon there will probably be sectional meetings. At S et'elock that night (Thurselay) ther will be another mass meeting for which we have been promised as a speaker a member of the cabinet. All day Friday, Dec. 11. sectional meetings will be held of each elepartment in the war work, including food production and conservation, fuel, medical. Ked Uross, etc. At these sectional meetings there will be representatives of the . council of natittnal elefense. any eine if whom would bo of sutlicient force to hav addressed the joint mass meetings of the day previous. The occasion will le epochal in the history of the state, and elirect, first-hand information will be given all war workers, ami the entire defense program of ttate ami nation disciisscel in detail. It is necessary that each county take steps immediately to have as large a membership as petssible present on these two days. The entire e-ounty council shouhl be in attendane-e if this is at all possible; also, the war workers generally shouhl attend from each county. It is really most essential that all the leaders cf every community in all of these war activities be present. Nothing in the immedi.vte future is as important as a large attenelance f the war workers at these sessions. The announcement f the speakers will be made in a few days. Suggestions receiveel include Dr. Henry VanDyke, former American minister to Holland; Uishop Williams of Detroit, who was sent to Kurope hy the lied Cross ami has just returned, et al. Other and exact announcements will be very soon forwardeel. Please give this all the publicity possible. We hope to have an editors' meeting on the second day to which all the eelitors of the state will come, and have wired George Creel himself, chairman of the committee on public information, to see if he tan nejt arrange to be here. INDIANA STATU UOUNUID OF DKl'KNsK.
Pa took Ma iV me in a ottomohvel yesterday. We had a long ride- leehiml a truck. Pa was think-ing ef 'tuning the ottomobeel but 'not now. Pa called the ottomobeel; a I. W. W. ; it elident work. I may buy this car. sed Pa, wen we started out for our ride-. It beelongs to etld Path Footbraik. sed Pa, he had a milyun left to him ; he left it to Droatlway, sod Pa. lie needs a littel change now, seel Pa. and I may buy this car. I hoap you will think twise. sed Ma. beefoar you buy a strondhandeel car. I have offen thot. sed Ma, about the Jirst new car that you were going to bring rolling up to the house, i dident ewer dr;em that you wud buy a used car. Well, we vvill see. sel Pa. Whare wur you & littel Uohbie like to go this p. m? YVe. mite go out to Urewster t- see Caroline, seel Ma, 1 have been wanting to see her .for sum time. Drewstcr it is, then, sed Pa. & he ttiald the driver to taik us to Brewster. The car vent tine for a little while ,fc Pa was talking all the time about how butiful is nater. Dill yure lungs with air. Pobbio. sed Pa. &. look at them golden feelds of waving torn, sod Pa. It was in jest such feelds that I worked wen a hoy. sed Pa. ei got this line pourful fram of mine, strong & ruggeel as this car, s'el Pa, & then the car stopjieel. Now, Dobbie. sed Ma. you can get a gooel loetk at them sohlen feelds of corn. We will prubly he rite here for mite a stretch. seel Ma. if I am not grately mistaiken. We will bo on our way in a min-
nit. sed P
it
is ej 1 1 1 V 1 1 1 e
.-.J.a
plug. Pa sed. Wen I put in a spark plug we w.ll be Hying
along aggenn, sed Pa.
Are you sure that is what ails . this char-iot? seel .Ma: it seemed tc
me. seel Ma. that it went 1 1 peece-" all at oust Sc nothing fust, seel Ma. like the old one (1 horse shay. Do not borrow trubbel. sed Pa. Keep cool. That is about the cosiest thing we can do, sed Ma. setting out here in this cohl fall air. Dobbie, sed Ma. do you think yure father will rise to the occashun? 1 eltant know. I seel. I wish a other car wul cum along. Well, master mechanick. sed Ma to Pa, after we had waited about a hour, how it old 099? of what are you speaking of. sed Pa. The gasoleen ghost, seel Ma. that you brot us out in. How does it look for fitting lioam beefoar winter fassens its icy clutch on the land, sed Ma. De silent, sel Pa; can't you see that I am faice to faicc with a crisis, sed Pa. This is no time to jeer, seel Pa. wen I neeel to have my wits about me & fix this here car. vt then a from! of Pa cairn along, he was driving a big truck - he put our car beehiml his truck fc brot us hack to town. All the way ba:k Ma was laffing about what a grate car our car was ii how nice it ran wen it was running after a truck. I think it will be nicer, seel Ma to Pa, if we buy a fonygraff & lissen te sweet mus:ek insted of what Dobbie efc me hail to lissen to, sod Ma. when you was fixing the I. YY. w.
Ill
1 1
i '8
In
-'Mi
RIO. U. S. PAT
i K
HpHE food value of cocoa has W
J- been nroven bv centnries S
of use, and dietitians and physicians the world over are enthusiastic in their endorsements of it. It is said to contain more nourishment than beef, in a more readily assimi
lated form. The choice, however, should be a high-grade
cocoa, Baker's" of course. IT IS DELICIOUS, TOO Trade-mark on every package Made only by
II II 'Dl ' ' v euA. A. iw WA -y Wvy. JLS 'Vi
Qfr.
Established 17S0 Dorchester
Tög
Mass.
" i i . . . ....... r - ...tu t... i., ., . i.
nil iii'iii rlalI;3 t io'l o -m..ru ti s41, lt iTi au.-r lit knhow, e-n if thei.- be suh a tiling a the water 1 American representative? have bestirred themrelves.
OTIII1K PUOPDi: MAY THINK Tin: sami: as vor. Do you estimate peojde from the point of their greatest merit or the peint of greatest eleficiency? If you are looking for the weak spots, you have poor eyes, indeed, If you elo not tinel many. The weak spots become holes w.th very little poking, sometime. If you think that "So and So" has rooms to rer.t in his brain storehouse, it does not go far toward helping to supply his need by telling about it. Everybody is looking for a chance to better his or her condition by rilling a vacancy in factit is much easier to take advantage of the lack in another than to make an opportunity out of whole cloth. Instead "f scanning every one you meet for the1 imperfection?, try finding the positive virtues. Things even up in the long chance ami sometimes the one whose instability seems most apparent at f.rst. on acquaintance proves the falsity .f the estimate. Dneik tleeply before you dare to make an estimate of anyone.
Can You More Easily Turn to Left Than to the Right
Special Price Emphasis On A Selected List of Studebaker and other Rebuilt Cars
IbJ CY IV A: vi ;v; D .llllP'st
Hy Garrett I. Scr Ds. "Here is a luestion that I have hael in' mind a long time: Why is it e.i-ier to make a left turn than a right? 1 have noticed that all race iv'i'-ses turn to the left, and 1 tind I can turn much easier to the left when running than to the right. I also remember a rate horse- that would slow uji n making a right turn. C. A. P. Chicago." If it were strictly true that "all race courses turn to the left" much force, would be- adelcel tet yeiur suggestion of some subtle cause underlving of turning which you have noticed. I 'earn, however, from the New York Jockey club that while ii has been customary in this country, up to the present, for race conrses to turn to the left, yet it D not an invariable rule, and on th? great Delmont park track the tnn is maele to the right. Dy the same autluuity I am informell that "in Ungland and foreign eouj.tries they race to the right, left, and straightaway, and the tracks are in all conceivable shapes." It is likely, then, that the habit of the race horse that you knew, of always slowing up on making a right turn was the result of a long education in racing on tracks having the left-hand turn, se that if he had been trained on the Delmont track, for instance, lie would have acquired exactly the opposite peculiarity, hesitating when required to turn to the left. I believe that It is also customary, in this country, for athletic race courses to turn to the left. If that be so, anyone who had been trained to run in his school days would retain a preference for the left-haml turn. At the same time, there i? un
doubtedly a time-honored tradition that left-hand turning is instinctive with all men. It is well known that a. person lost in a great forest or where there are no landmarks to guide him. almost invariably travels in a circle, in spite of a!l his efforts to go straight ahead, and that he also habitually turns to the left. I was once lost in the Adirondack woods, and although I vva-s well acepuainted with the tradition, and deliberately tried to make a straight course, and kept tool, yet, to my astonishment, and indeed to my amusement and that of my friends. I managed to travel in a circle, and 1 remember that that circle turned to the left around the camp I was trying to find. It has often been sugge.-tec. that be cause of the circling to ti e left may be found in bodily peculiarities, ger.e rally shared by all men, such a?
right-handedness, or a slight difference in the length, or vigor, of the right ami left legs. If there is a cause of this kinel operating. I would suggest that it may arise from tho situation of the heart n the left of the median line of the body. It is inconceivable that this onesided location of the driving-engine of the body may have some effect upon the guiding mechanism. We see in all natural phenomena the enormous importarce of a delicate balance of forces, and how the lack of such balance, or an eccentric disposition of the parts, leads to the most unexpected results. Pat there is still another intluence at work tending to make things that move in a circle round to the left, if they are on the north side of the earth's equator, and this is the rotation eif the globe -n its axis. I would by no means assert that this curious force is responsible for the peculiarities of animal locomotion that we have been talking about, and yet, almost infinitely, slight as its influence must be in such cases, that influence certainly exists, and ou are at liberty to imagine, if you like, that a delicately organized system may unconsciously yield to it. The force in question operate? in opposite directions in the two hemispheres, swaying moving objects to right in the northern hemisphere, ami to the left in the southern. This may seem a Hat contradiction of what has been said above concerning the tendency to turn to the left north of the equator, but a little consieleration will show how a righthand shift produces- a left-hand circling. This is best seen in the case of cyclonic motions of the atmosphere, which swing round to the left, or against the hands of a clock. in the northern hemisphere, although the eleflection produced by the earth's rotation is toward the right. Make a diagram of a complete circle or in-blowing winds tending toward a common center, and each diverted to the right, and you will see at one- how the combination of right-hanc deflections produces a left-hand circling of the entire system of winds. In an imaginary application of this force to ex-plain the left-hanei circling of a lost man in the woods, which I suggest simply because of its theoretical interest, wo may suppose the right-hand "throw" of the rotatory force to be instinctively resi?teei by ihe muscles so that the foo-.steps are gradually
curved away in the other direction, the resistance assuming the function of the raised outer rail on a railroad curve.
Cut prices on the uci cars wc have leit will pr-duM; equalled aain by Studebaker r any nthcr Comp.un. snrinr and summer, when the production of ne'v cid
sure to be curtailed, used cars nuit brine; higher prices You can buy one of these Rebuilt Cars now drive it all vinvr. and perhaps sell in the sprint; for as much or more than ym pa;. tc it today. That is why every one of these cars is an investment. If thev were not in lirst class condition when we took liiein in trade, we re'built them, had them retinished. repainted, and made them look like new. And now you can obtain them below wholale prices. And thev are in such 0od condition that you will not be ashamed to drive one of them an v where at a.ny time. They arc as onJ as new cars. It is only a technicality to call them "used cars." We admit wc are enthusiastic about these cars, and we have a rieht to be, because it is unusual to tin J sucli .alues in mMnr air anywhere at such cur prices. We are sure yui cannot find their equal in town. The following cars Rebuilt for special selling are worthy of your immediate interest:
Is .lbs.
Th-
teiJ.tHler Six TMirinr Carries." eeHlll'iie.l Witll sl) k
ers a u 1 Jubrii-l mubbers. sj"tliul)t. two extra tire, good rinbh: tir in good condition itl MtidehaJier Six Tenjrinjr Sf-,Ian "1s vries," a dMinwttr;itr ;tr elrivrn itbetit 'J.nnn niib-s. bad best of est re- in hiiniD eif expert drivers, rebuilt, refinished. rj..-tinted maroon edr. equipped with silk curtains. g"d tire ttii!rtakrr S.i KeaIdt-r "is erb-s." t It r-e - pa ? n gor. rebuilt, refinished. tire good, one extra, driven about :i.ioo miles; a bargain .V
rtn.fakt !tr noat i.r 17 -rl"t. two-p:isn-ng-r. re:u!t. !nvn than TOO mik: vt mid' -rf .jl fa'gnin. Isdice ilret.. ItoHiUter ,i!t an I n - finished, tires g'-o I ; jh v ptt-u: tl bargain. St tilrtaker lottr liVtfcd.iW -Phi m-"I -el. g.-o-I eondition. ri'ctilt t-q g.. tins good sfM Two I'r Touring i r I 'D. gr..! oli.Mt ion. tires, g,,.,.l. ff.;., gr. d. grw.d finish, ea', ... i.v Otrrland t'"il T Pi.-I tires, .jrii'i hs-t than r.."' rr.;h fJ.V In addition ve fine t free r:ir fr whi-h r.e r-aMttb!ei e.fb-r wiM te-fllse.-l.
Uvery car a light, economical, late model cir, with good tires, good paint, good leather, good-as-ncw running order. opi'.v i:yi:nint,s. Cmlit Tonn to Hcsi-tnsihle Dujcrs. Studebaker Corporation of America Cor. South and Lafayette Sts. The factory m'ID iwyl -ars at cot without profit. The- name of StmJcbakcr a suaranuv of x.dtic.
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IIARRY L.YERRICK
Funeral Director
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MAX ADLER COMPANY
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