South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 13, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 13 January 1919 — Page 4
V
OXIAV i,VI.M.N., JAM'AIIV T.. 191:. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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lUUUIEL IL MTMUKKS. VrraMnt J. iL fcXül'llIINSO.N. I-u.liiLf. John iii:m:v zuvr.i:.
iv.ito.-.
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ll.in. Pbon IUI,
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ADVERTISING RATKS: Ak the adrertUIiur 3ej(i rtrnent f.1? n A.leertl.ln lit-prentJtlve : CUNT. LOKE.NZl'.N ttOODiUN. ZÜ rlftb Av., New York Utj cud Aiv. UUjf. Cnlcaftra. The Neua-Tluie oiiüiatotm to keep it adrertlitiitf rolumnc free from fraudulent Lilsreprt -,enttl n. Any per.on cerrauded through patrunage f any ad vertUemenl 1" thl ptl'tt will ronfar a favur ou the iuaiugint.nt t.v leportlus Ihr xai-ta completely.
JANUARY 13, 1919.
PASSENGER PIGEONS AGAIN. Apparently authentic reports are roMing to public i.otlcc that passenger plprons hav? lfcn sfn recently in flight, or roosting sufficiently near for the olserts to deternilno without question that they won! peohnentt, of what Ion? has hrcn mounifil as a vanl.hetl race. Tho annihilation of the nassen r piuon is one f he blots upon our history. It ranks with the destruction of our whit? pine forests in the early lumbering t'ay.s as one of the colos.al blunders roptcd in ignorance find fostered by creed, with which the history of new 1. iiuls i.i too oftn stained. The folly of their de truction was recognized too late for the tardy game laws to do any good. Attempts were then made to breed the birds in captivity, but they are ensentially children of the open and perished almost fts swiftly vender man's nurture as under his i?un lire, rhe last known pair dyinsr in 1014. Kewaxds ofTered since then for the discovery of passenger pigeons have tjone unearned, and until this latest news revived it, hope that they still existed had been abandoned. Perhaps they have indeed been breeding in some teeret haunt, as has heen claimed, and now are venturing forth, temptfd by whispers of world disarmament or stirred by jealousy lest man with his new found wines shall wrest from them their records for lonp and peedy tlik'ht. Perhaps the laws destined for their protection were not in vain after all, and continued safety has J, red returning confidence. In any event their reappearance will be hailed with delight by a. nation coming, though slowly, to an appreciation of the value of its bird citizens, and their protection now will be as great a . matter of public concern as their former destruction was of public neglect.
A CENTURY OF GROWTH. The world Is anxious to get back to business. Kvery country is struggling with its domestic trade problems, while it awaits impatiently the assembling of the peace conference and the results of its lindings, which will go so far toward establishing a bask; for international trade relation. In view of the present situation it is interesting to review a little the past history of world commerce, to recall that just 100 years ago, the greatest factor in the development of 0orld trade was launched the steam-driven vessel for ocean tral'ic. It was in is 18 that the Savannah. planned by laniel Iod of Virginia and built in New York by Krancis Pickel, sailed from New York to Savannah and thence to I-lverp ol, the ürst ocean "liner." At that time world trade was estimated at about $1moiooo.Om. In 1 1 I h it stood at a value of $.0.t'CO.CHKVJUU. The rapidity of its growth in the lat TOO years is due lirst to the steamship, then the railroad and telegraph and telephone lim-s. and last hut tar from le.ist. the establishment of sound financial and banking systems-. It is hard to realize that tb past Im jears liavo seen more development in o4id trade than all the preious timn in the history of man, and that much of thU development is due to inwntioiiH which aro the product of the pr-.-ent generation. One thine, however, is certain: International peace is vital, for upon i; lianas international trade and the welfare of the world.
HIGH PRICES FOR W HEAT. M,i e everj'body has b-en wrong about thai iniuli-di?cti--d wheat guarante,.. The New York Wot bi H'ite unconvinced by prediction (.f i lentiful crops itul low prices .n the marke, this. ear and next. "What prices u ill prevail throughout the world l.etween now and mid-summer. I'..'", is wholly a mater of speculation." sas the World. "'While peace has .berated some wheat not available in war. it is to be :. memered that in the greater part of Purope toeks re exhausted and the. demand is urgent. ";reat Pritain has ;t fixed pii. e. and so lias c'.ui.iiia. IlUssi.i cannot be nua h of a competitor this year, and Argentina's crop ;s mat great. There is l.etter reason .herefore. to h-uiu" that the average world price for wheat for two years come will le very high than .o hold that it nI'.1 fall to au tiling like the ante-war evel." The Ai;if!'.t',vi farmer, then, may not be so legitimate a subject for envy as some of the experts have represented. He may not get any more for his wheat vith Pii'. b' Sam's guarantee of J..-t a lu.shel than
:.e would hae gotten otherwise, in the open market, m competition with tlo- world. He may not get o much. The nation may l.e tlu I.j; fuiary rather than he farmer. Anyway, there . no reason to g t excited about the matter. What i done is done, and what will wl'i e, so far as wheat i concerned. We can wait an 1 ee. secure in the knowledge that the present arrangenei.t is probably f.iir enough, and neither produce.aor censumtr can hsr much by it.
RATIONING THE WORLD. The P-agae ,,( nations to pacifv the world may tl'
b in the doubtful st-g-. iu the idea ba k of it is already in prartieal operation. There In now in existence a league of nations to feed the world. Herbert ' Hoover is running it. with a mandate from the, allied powers and with gutrantee of their full support ar.il cooperation. I
It in a vat undertaKlner, immensely "more comprehensive in ncope than the bif labor of Mr. Hoover in foeriing Iiejgium and subsequently apportioning the food resources of the t'nited States. The whole world is to he rationed. The available foodstuff of a'.', nations are to b regarded as one great store, to be
divided among the various populations as
The Melting Pot COMKI T. KE I-OTTiCCK WITH rs
orld
S.M1'M).V TllIClvlID.
Tin:
t
It could not ie, He would not die
With hls.,4big stick
death away. j into a thimr And then. I read: "Death took him forever.
lacked the spontaneity that sudden
; ly charmed the man of the
j for whom she was workirg. Hith-j ; crto. he had regarded her merely ias a necessity in his Well regulated J orlice. I "Fine! That will do for today. I ; Now. run alonif and doll up for our i party! What'? your address and bei
sure to get ready on time! '
Petty hurried home on winged fed and there in the boarding; ho'Jre h. fairy Rodmother, in the person of a swe. t young singer from the south.
he'd frighten ! hanged the drab little stenographer!
of beauty and a joy j
appear. The work
in his sleep."
their needs j A coward's trick, it was to .-Hp in
while he slept. rii1 li Lu Vilm Tinün-'.r
is handled under the authority of the j r, . . , , , ,
I iie aiwajs nau piayeu alii' 1 powers, and made pe.-sible by their funds, PeIief may naturally he "iven first to allied peoples who j Shame on you. Death, to trick him -o y ivo w.tfferr-d everli- frn.n o in xt hlK thv ! Hll sUal from hilil Iii light, llU
.v.. ... -." . , ,. ..... ... " obvious right
vere ine wiioeeiii anu agKri-reu paiiie. nui mere
v.ill be no real discrimination. As soon as the system is in good working order, food will be sent, in sufficient quantity, to Central Purope and wherever else it is. needed. This is in many ways th" most ambitious International enterprise ever undertaken. The spirit and method back of it are precily the spirit and method necessary for the proposed world league. Mr. Hoover's work is Justly referred to as the "first test" of such -i league. If the nations can cooperate in a vital economic matter, surely they can cooperate no less successfully in the more vital matter of keeping a well-fed world from Mghtinp. .
greatest
To make this last of all hi
fight. A coward's trick, it was to slip while he slept. You took him unaware. Who always had played fair. M. L. C
in
THE CONQUERING PENNY. The American people, consumed, last year. "Ö7.C14.J00 pennies. That is Ui number minted and thrown into circulation, to add to the quantity already circulating. The total, if there were any va of rindln? it out, would certainly bo an imposing figure, inasmuch as no less than 1,000, 000, 00u pennies had been minted in the previous 10 years, and most of them are probably ttill in use. The fact that last year's production is three time? the previous 10-year average .shows what an important place the one-cent piece occupies in our present coinage. If the humble copper was scorned in prewar years, and m the early years of the war. it ! tcorned no longer. .Mounting prices have only In creased the demand for it. The principal cause of the greatly accelerated demand of late may have been the payment of the many small war taxes running into odd cents; but a still stronger influence has been the growing spirit of thrift, revealed in the fixing of odd prices for commodities and in the claiming of small change by many who used to scorn anything less than a nickel. Even on thf Pacific slope the penny has won recognition at last.
THE FEMININE MENACE. Some English opponents of woman labor urge as an objection to it that women require better surroundings than men. Oh. very well! That settles the whole Industrial question. If women are going to ciutter up the works with a whole lot of unnecessary neatness, sanitation amj comfort, they should be confined strictly to the home, where these habits will conduce as little as possible to the detriment of mankind!
Other Editor Than Ours i
m:siH)NsiniLiTY for kussia. (IiKlianalHiIIs News.) Those few who insist that America has no responsibility ior the Russian situation, and no call to help save the people of that unhaupy country from a terrible fate, will do well to read u series of articles now running in the National Civic Federation Review, written by (sustavus Myers. For in them it is shown that hol- j shevism is very largely of American origin. It having leen preached in this country for years by the I. W. W. r-nd the extreme socialists. It was from this movement, , that had for its object the destruction of society, that many of the present Russian leaders absorbed their! doctrine. Prom the Pnited States came Shatoff, Peters (head of the notorious red guard), Trotzky, Wesley.' Sirola. all of whom had been agitators in this country, and under I. W. W. influence. Of the 7- members of the central soviet at Moscow, 11 are said to control it. and these ii all returned to Russia from the United States. There are, it should also be said, many such men still left with us. and they are inculcating the same det stable doctrines that have wrecked Russia. The story of the work of the bolshevists, as told by Mr. Myers, is almost incredible. There is no government a I all in Russia in any civllired sense, no industry, no credit. The man of intelligence and technical skill is recognized as an enemy to ""the people." There has been a decline in industrial efficiency of at least SO perc nt. Money has been stolen by the millions. The people have been butchered by the thousands and tens of thousands with a ruthlcv.ness far beyond any shown under the old regime. Freedom of speech and of the press is denied. There is Indeed no freedom of any sort except for those in control, and they are mostly criminals. Many of the masters have grown rich. They them-" selves are now "bourgeoisie." One authority says: "Almost all the bolshevik leaders are people who have returned from America. They were supplemented by an Immense swarm of criminals release! from Siberia, as also liberated criminals from the prisons in Moscow, Petrograd and other places. We have (in one soviet) president, Tobelson, a German spy. e.-jailbird und robber; Mochin, of the executive committee, a deserter from the Russian army, a counterfeiter and ex-Jailbird; his assistant. Tchatkovsky, also an ex-Jailbird; Commissioner of Prisons Pmilianoff, ex-jailbird and robber; his assistant, Nakileff. previouslv condemned to Jail for robbery; the commissioner of food, who was convicted for misappropriation of it nds; Korovin. commissioner of '.ehools. an ex-jailbird; Tillick, convicted for robbery, now commissioner of finance: Mithin, commissioner of militia, an ex-jailbird, and finally we have as commissioner of health an illiterate peasant. And these are the men who are at the he.td of affairs in Russia today." There is local government In the sense that each comiminit or group is subject to no central authority, for it is said that even I.enine and Trotzky have lost their power. Rut the government i about what It w ould be in Indianapolis If we were ruled by the men now In our Jails and penitentiaries and former saloon hums. The workingmen do not organize themselves.- They are org inizcAl. controlled and coerced by the gang In pow er.
'The bolsheviks." jays another witne. "are shooting
down the workingmen far more ruthlessly than under the old regime. They have been shootinpr them by the thousands in frequent massacres." "The so-called bol-
Ishevik rule," says another. "Is really a mutiny of slaves
and criminals." And the masters came from America! Have we not much to do in the way of helping the people of Russia?
Tlu re. was evidence of much suppressed excitement around police headquarters. Even Asst. Chief Cassidy -displayed s.gns of unwonted anticipation. Police office! s generally were in boyish moods', and Pol McAulilTe. the News-Times' night police reporter, recognized that an exceedingly pood story was about to break. A night or two before u highway robbery had been committed. A robber had held up one of South Bend's citizens, and had relieved him of much money and other valuable possessions. The police had been hot on the trail of the bold highwaymen ever since, and they had just arrested three men whom they had accused of having committed the robbery. Of course, as only one of the three men was guilty of the crime, the citizen who had been the victim of the highwayman's activities must be sent for to identify the robber. An officer. was dispatched for the citizen. While awaiting the arrival of the robber's victim, the three suspects who had been apprehended, under difficulties, were arranged along the long bench in the desk sergeant'n room. Asst. Chief Cassidy paced up, and down the room in front of the desk sergeant's desk, and Rob waited at one end of the bench where the three suspects sat. making mental notes of their appearance, and listening to Cassidy's account of how they had been captured. Finally, after a wait of nearly an hour, the citizen who had been waylaid and robbed, arrived in the company of the officer who had been sent for him"We've got the man who held you up," was the greeting Cassidy gave the citizen, as he walked down the stairs in the desk sergeant's room. "If one 'of this bunch, but you'll have to point out which one." "I know him, all right." vouchsafed the citizen "I couldn't forget him." He looked intently at the three men sitting on the bench, glanced casually at Rob. and then walking up to the newspaper reporter, pointing an emphatically certain finger at him with the statement: "That's the man." Immediately police headquarters went into an uproar of merriment. Obviously, the citizen had made a mistake, but it was a good joke on the reporter and Cassidy and the officers made th. most of it. After the fun had subsided, the citizen finally pointed c;t the right man from among the three suspects". "What if that had been somebody else, a stranger for instance, and that man had pointed him out as the guilty party? "Maybe there is something to this mistaken identity stuff." soliloquized Rob, as he finished getting the story. J. C
Mistletoe
By A. Maria Crawford.
"I call that rotten luck." Martin Heiskell droped a little square of perfumed paper on his desk and looked across at his young stenographer, his handsomo face sullen over the bad news. ''I've had a table at Mason's engaged for weeks, for New Year's supper, you know.
i and now the girl has turned me
down, at the last minute. Of course, j
it's late in the day to make any
"My blue satin tits ou as if it' had been made for you. child. Why ' haven't you piled your lovely hair; on tot of your head before? You're; a real beauty! Now. wait until I ! get my velvet coat! Don't bay a j word! I'm enjoying this as much as! you are." erkd the generous to'-'th-1 erner. '"I'm going to .nke you in: hand, child. What possibilities vou ! have!" ' And then while she was s-till j dazed w ith the wonder of all of it, j Petty found herself in a pray lined 1 limousine, gliding down the crowd- ; ed thoroughfare of the ci'y's great; white way. She felt as if she her- ' self were acting a part in a play when they went into a theater. The ! music, the soft lights, the merry j groups of handsomely gowned worn-j en. the sudden surprised happiness In the eyes of the man beside her j acted as a stimulus to the girl who
seemed, to nave supped, ny chance, into Paradise for the span of a few brief hours. Eater, in the gay restaurant, transformed into a veritable fairyland. Petty looked about her with eager. child like eyes of wonder. The ceilings were festooned with artistic arrangements of colored papers that soon were to open mysteriously and spill a wealth of flowers, confetti and tiny souvenirs on the riotous crowds below. Eittle boughs of mistletoe, suspended over each softly lighten? table, swung slowly back and forth. Restraint had been thrown aside and men. awkward as young boys at their first New Year's party, tried to catch their ladies fair under the magic bough of green. Pettv smiled at Martin Heiskell
across the little table with its mound of crimson roses. "You're giing me a lovely evening!" she said, softly. "I am almost selfish enough to be glad that somebody else could not , come." 1 Martin looked at a nearby table, where that somebody else, with too red lips and over bright eyes, was trying to lure him over to make peace. Then he smiled back at the slender innocent young girl opposite i him. j "It was the best luck I ever had." he declared heartily. "I think you've
been a princess in disguise." There was no mistaking the admiration in his eyes. He looked nt her softly curving red lips and then up at the slowly swaying bough of mistletoe. Already, a New Year's tesolution was forming in his heart and mind. He would live differently hereafter so that some time, not far distant he would dare The Hawaiian players besan a dollicking tune and out on the lloor. two by two, went the merry, carefree crowd. As Petty danced her heart was as light as her feet. Was it onlv that afternoon she had worn a plain blue serge frock and taken dictation by the hour from a man who regarded her as a piece of office furniture? For weeks she had secretlv wondered what she would say if some day, by chance, he saw that she was a young, healthy girl, who wanted to play a little in the gay world of which he had only dreamed. She looked up and found his disconcerting brown eyes on her. "Tomorrow," he said, masterfully, "is a holiday, you know. I'm going to take you out to mother's place, on Eong Island. It will be a great trip through the snow just you and T " Midnight such a din of bells and whistles, laughter and sonc! From overhead came a shower of flowers and tiny birds that fluttered as if
they had life. And through it all, a I rain of confetti that poured down I like vnri-colored jewels and lodged, j picturesquely, in the girl's fluffy hair. I Petty laughed aloud with the joy that was hers and to Martin Heis-
kell's ears, it rang with freshness md purity, like some vagrant little wind among the trees far away from the carnival scene of the gilded restaurant. Old ideals, half forgotten, old dreams stirred again at the lithe oung body. He found himself lauuhing with her. like a boy. Put above the exciting din, clear like a clarion call, the new resolution formed into something tangible.
I something real.
"Oh girl. Petty. he said. liUskily. as he placed the borrow d velvet coat around her white shoulders. "I am going to make myself worthy of
that next year when the
GEO
RGE
WYMAN & CO.
onso aief -e V
February McCall Patterns nearly sixty new ones Now to be had at Pattern setcicn first floor.
January Sale of White Goods offers exceptional savings Our annual January selling of W hile oods starus tomorrow, Tuesday, with unusual pricings on white materials used tor lingerie and bedding needs. Purchased by us from one and a half to two years a,o at low prices, w e are enabled to oiler them in most instances at "less than today's wholesale prices.
Nainsook 39c yd. JO yds. $3.50
.iino.'s.
Longcloth 29c yd, 10 yds. $2.69
U) inches wide, soft chamois Present value 5oc vard.
llIUSJl.
m inch Imperial English W urtli toJav oue arj.
other arrangement. .New i ear s evo i
rw-k tirr.e for n fellnW !(i he rlonn !
mamc bougn or misuevoe nan-s
Th.
;kv's
my
I want to frolic then
limit." Petty Hamilton's heart was behaving in most unsual fashion. It felt as if it were flopping around like a smajl fish out of water. Her good looking employer had never addressed her before except on matters of business. She looked down at her note book, trying to think of some comforting remark thu might tend to prolong the new pet-
sonai element in the conversation. : "Perhaps she'll change her mind " she managed to stammer. I "idie's a spoiled little devil and j I'm through with her. She's in bin j time vaudeville, but got a week off ,
to come home to her sister's wedding. The fact is. she's met a new man and she's out for his scalp tonight."
I m erv sorrv. an t vou
some other friend?" came flowing back, heart and brought a her cheeks. A pb
truded Pself on Martin Heiskell's disappointment. "Why can't you go with me. MI---lUtty, or have you. too. a better looking beau for tonight?" "I'll be delighted. crie.i Petty, eagerly. If she had been more than just 19. .If she had been born in a city instead of a small country town, her quIcV acceptance would haw
over jour pretty head, the right to stamp own."
I may have vou as my
STUFFED UP MTH "A BAD COLD?"
Get busy with a bottlo of Dr. Kind's New Discovery at once
Coughs, colds and broachlal attacia th?y are all likely to result in dangerous aftermaths unless checked in time. And how cflectivcly and quickly Dr. Kind's New Discovery helns to do the
Rettv's courage ' checking work! Iatlarncd, irritated
It warmed her I nembrascs are soothed, the raucous
prettv color to Pni loosened freely, aaJ quiet, I 1 . 1 rii en t ft w
isant idea ob- llJtJUI siccj- tuuows. iaa. ana 91..U.
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No mere lazy bowels, yellow com-
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Nainsook 59c yd. 10 yds. $5.00 M inch Japanese sheer Nainsook. Worth today 75c yard. WHITE VOILE 20c YD. 40 inches wide, beautiful material. Worth today Sue yard. STRIPE VOILE 50c YD. 40 inch white stripe or white ground. Present value 8 5c vard.
Plisse at 29c yd. Pres. Val. 50c
unJei'.v ear.
3o inch white Plisse lor Present value is 5oc vard.
in.
WAFFLE CHECK 2e VI).
suitable tor pajamas or underwear. Worth SOC todaV.
STRIPE MADRAS lc VD.line fabric tr shirtiny. Worth dav.
-2 in.. 5oc p-
White Goods Section - 1st Floor
36 inch Bleached Muslin. Special - 36 inch Unbleached Muslin. Special - 46 inch Imperial Pillow Tubing - -One lot 3 pound Cotton Bats. Special One lot 3 pound Cotton Bats. Special
One lot Toil du Nord Ginghams. Special
- 19c yd. - 21c yd. 371c yd. 89c each $1.15 each
25c yd.
One lot 36 inch Apron Gingham. Special - 22hc yd.
Th
le above offerings in Domestic materials are offered special for a
while the asortments last.
tew' da YS
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Look, for the 11 LjijlllfS sealed package, but lj jjfs havc an cyc out 1 jfjjj also for the name ill Warn msmjRTs m
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FEED Purina Scratch $4.00 Sucrene Scratch $3.85 Tip Top Scratch $3.75 Chicken Chowder $4.25 Compare these prices with the price of es and then buy teed from us. Artificial Ice Co. 525-535 N. Emerick St. Home 6123; Bcli 2221.
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M . 9 ' ! 1 !i
Eyes Examined by
hi. LEMONTREE y C.ath UDit LMMiinf Optometrist m! ManuMWtarlnr Optician. 22IH OrTU MICHIGAN ST.
in i
formet Arr ior K
WATCH US GROW i
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''fit
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Examined
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Doa't Pay Cash for Your Clothing. Your Cr)!t I. iood at GATELY'S, r.Sl S. Mlcl:lran St.
Advertisers make profits from volume not prices.
