South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 23, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 23 January 1919 — Page 4
nn ksiav i;vi:m(;, .ianiwuy 22, ii9.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS - TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. THE NEWS-TIMlo PRINTING CO. CAP. Hl EL II. .vL.Mili:itS. TrenIdrnL J, IL STLi'HUNS.JN. I'uMIiher. Iill.NHV ZLVi'it. EJltor.
Member United Press Associations Morning Edition. MEMULit ASS KTIATED IMIES5. The Aci3t"J Vrtn ! exrlusivelr entitled t th me for rtpablkation cf 11 orwi iiliJtc.j? relltol to It or not otber- ' creouej in tßl papr, and 1ik tb lo;il nt-w iutH.ttl terrlo. TUi ilot not rnply to our afteruooti pmer. All rltfLu of republication of preial cllnptLes Lereia are revere hi a- publishers mm to t.,tU editions.
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OFFICE; riMM iui.
21U W. Colfax at.
tin I I'bn 210O.
Csll t the cftice or teiephoue t'jOTe nir.lri a'Jtl &i fo. c apartment wnutH LMltunal. AtlvertUtuff. Circulation of Accounting. Vor wDt &am." If you- iaio t In tN t.rpoo4 ülrectorj, bill will le ctileU aftr Iniertion. Keport lotttentioo to buln, bid (iPi utiou, poor delivery of paper. I .id UupLooe aamc. tc. to Lal of department Hb wbicn you r r;iiiof. Ttie .NeT.a-T.-n,4 tes tlilrti-ea truui. liae, uli of Wßkii teipond tj Uou l'i;n llil IÜJ Bell 210).
erntlvo. It is to Co into :Tect one year .after ratification. That means a little more than one year from the prrnt time, Locause the ratification 1 officially lat-l
tat the Uni- th pTtry of Ftate receives formal
notice from the Ftate frovernmnts. This constitutional anienrtment. therefor1, munt wait until February or March. 1P20. for fulfillment. Actually, though, the whole country will be Jry Ions before that, as a result of the congressional act which t?cornes effective July 1, this year. That act pr"idr.s only for prohibition until the army U deinobUlzel. but It L hardly poIMe that th demobilization vtlll l completed before the amendment Is effective. Actually, then, the liquor traffic has only a little more than four months leqs of life. Wet states and wet communities will probably make the rnot of it. The more they make of It, the gladder mt people will be when It Is all over and the nation can settle down to a period of permanent pobriety.
The Melting Pot COME! TAKE POTT, C CK WITH CB
8UBSCK1ITION IIA1 IIS : Morulas snJ Evening F.'Vfu flnfie Copy, 8; Suadtj, 6c. Delivered by carrier Id Sj lD'l and Mhanakii, 1.00 pr yrar lu aivan e. or lie by
tue
Morning- mun k.lug UUltWi. Uaiij iuclut.iütf ISuiida,.
"f toe per inoDtri: ,u.- two xu-mtl.; vc per mourn in?re liter, ot J JAj per year in idvanee. Entere J at tLe 6oulb litaJ lOMüIite mm aocottU dm mail. ADVERTISING KATES; Alk tfce adrerti!a? t'l-partrnpnt reifo Adfcrtiilnif KeprentatlTea: L)SE LOKKNZEN & WOuuiUN, U irtb At., .Sn Vurk t.ltj. tnrt Adv. iiMff. Coicafy. TLe 4N"eH-iliBft eudeaorg lo keep its advertiug column fre from frotlule:it Mlreprehentatiju. Any peroa defruuded tarou!i patrornte f nr mi vertiseiueul lu tnU paper will cunfr a lavur on tlto mauir.ouieut 'v rtportlojf tli laiti cotapleUi.
JANUARY 23, 1919.
HEAVEN HAVE PITY ON US. Anyhw Lloyd George and Georges Clcmenceau are ery satisfactory to Ike Marcoon, even if J'res't Wilson is only pa."iin;ly nunttonable; it is so much more fashionable thes days, you know, to be pro-British or pro-French, or even pro-Italian, than to be pro-American. America not now beinp under the presidential dominance of a particular political school. Isaac came over from somewhere, all lit up in excessive brilliancy, to talk about "The war and after," and after he had finished, with plentiful applause for the leaders of France and England, and nothing sal appUud Aiu'.r'caY leader about, littl aK'reRations Krouped on the street corners and thanked ;od they were not "like the poor publicans." It is so cheap to be pro-American, you know! It is riprht and nice to talk about "bulkheadlng against the indiscriminate tide of Illicit humanity," but even at that we havenjt anything fit to mention. even our president, particularly when not of a select political complexion; one that Is perpetually radiant with God's blessed sunshine Oh, but if the thlnps the American piesident is dolnsr. were only beinp done by a leader of (the o. p.) "C,od own Party." the Americanized "ne plus ultra" of Prussian epotlsm! It Indeed, seems Strang- that the American people fchould have made the mistake twice of not electing all these snarling critics to the presidency. It Is a wonder that God Almighty hasn't singled them out and set them on the various thrones of the earth to rule an If by divine right and yet we pretend to marvel that our foreign born have so little respect for us; a respect that we lack the sens to show for ourselves. A propaganda, deliberately propagated in (Ifrmany to breed disrespect for American institutions ;md authority among; 1 er foreign born citizens, and belittle all of us in the eye of the world, could neVer have been better calculated to serve that purpose than the propaganda now leing spread here in America by certain so-called s;atesmen, and oratorical renegades, campaigning for partisan advantage rather than the advancement of rational welfare, or the future of the world. Put of course, we mustn't mention It. It is becoming unfashionable to be pro-American. our good friend, Marcoson. we might guess from his attitude, iiiust have met the Kaiser sonn time in his travels, and may be one of those of whom the ex-eaiperor spoke i "IVntii-t" lavls: who spent the most of his time
SHOULD DE JOÜ STARS NOW. L5u-sino- institutions everywhere, during the war, have proudly displayed service stars to show the number of men they gave to the army atd navy. The significance of those stars has largely passed with the passing of the emergency that called them. As the absentees come back home, the starred Hags and pennants begin to disappear. The end, however, has not really come, it is not all over until all thej boys who went away to ilerht have come back all the living and resumed their places in civilian life. Here Is discovered a duty and responsibility which many stay-at-home citizen arc In danger of Ignoring. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer springs a suggestion that deserves to find quick acceptance everywhere. It hangs out a flag bearing several &tar, and under them the explanatory words, "Returned Soldiers Employed Here." Surely, as the Post-Intelligencer says, it ought to be made "as much a matter of pride to give a soldier a job as to display the fact that an employe had gone to war." Why, then, not advertise the fact that the job has been given ?
If is n. ported undoubtedly by his enemies, that William Jennings Cryan has consented to appear in vaudeville for the mere pittance of $1,500 a wek. He is quoted as saying that he had tried almost everything else and mißht as well try the vaudeville tage. Apparently Mr. Pryan is the man who Is willing to "try anything once." i?uch being the case, he will have to forgive his audiences If they feel the same way, ')ut while your thinking It over, remember that this story is just another slur cast at Mr. Pryan. probably by "beer-guzzled" haters of all men who oppose them.
1 Other Editors Than Ours 1 - '
It would be e.iter to know what to do about Mexico if it were known how much of tho Mexican news is fact and how much propaganda.
McAdoo and Grepory ought to be making flivvers.
ItnXKY FORI'S OWN PHILOSOPHY. (Dearborn Independent.) Kvery business that employs more than one man is a partnership. This is so whether the man at the bead of the business acknowledges It or not. Suppose a man Invents an article which lt capable cf wide use by the people. With his own two hands ho cannot make enough of them to satisfy the demand. He might work hard all his life and make only u few. io he gets other men to give their labor that his creation may gain currency in the world. It is still his idea, but they help him to spread It. Without his i:lea there would not be so many jobs In the world. Without their labor there would not be so many articles of commerce. You see, the man at the head can no longer say my business, but all of them together can say 'our business, and when this is the spirit, and it is practiced all the way through, the very best kind of a
: ate his ancestry back to yorne Furopean .-oil. He cert inly wouldn't want to admit to the kaiser, or to Lloyd (Jnirge or Georges Clcmenceau. or any other ff reign potentate, that in came from a country presided o er by o weak a sister as he would have us imply Pis"t Wilson to be.
THE SAILORS' BOND. Th'ie will ye tales of the sea to suit the imagination of everybody, when the full story of the war is printed. And the Linns coming from sea disasters
for the sea
... , . . . ... , . . , , i artnership exists. apologizing for his American citizenship by seeking to . . , ., , 4 ,..4, -
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"our." both in the shops and the head otHce. The workman has got to assume that it is "our" business. It is the only way he can feel that it Is "his" business too. The source of every productive result is the day's work. That is the seed from which every fruitful crop iprings. The farmer gets no more out of the ground than he puts into it by his labor. And it Is what the worker puts into the business that makes it pay. What would any of us be without work? Who Is so pitiable as the man without an occupation that contributes something to the life of the race? And just as pitiable is the man who drags himself tlü'oush the day's work as if he were a slave, doing us little as possible, and that little badly. He is a brake on the wheels of industry'- He 1 low-
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before t-oii- i 01 ,nK us wage-paj nig puvei. ti- is nur u. iaua ma
chine that costs more than It produces. Multiply him by a sufficient number and the business is ruined it loses its power to support anybody connected with it. There will never be a system invented which will ... away with the necessity of work. Nature has Keen to that. Idle hands and minds wer never intended lor any cno of u. Work is our sanity, our self-respect, our salvation. So far from being a curse, work is the greatest blessing. It is only when it is mixed with indolence or injustice that it becomes a curse. Take it from a man who has worked from his t.irliest years, and who is a workingman now. and proud to be one. that no one can get any more out of his job than he puts into it. N'ot because any man says so. but because it is the ral nature of things.
Will be among the most difficult to .settle does stramre things.
Among the interesiin- iiuesiions nvv
fcrr.-s is the decision us to what emirs- should be pur,Jcd with icgard to $ 1 . i worth of Liberty bond.? lost by the men or the l S. ruir Man Idego when that ss,.l w,,s sunk oil Fire Island while engaged in conoy dut. There is no provision nf law authorizing the issn of duplicate in lieu of lo?t coupon bonds, and unless congress makes sonic provision thev officers and sailors will loe the money they have inxested in the cause of libcrt.N. 1 he ugncd to take il;c bonds through a San Francisco bank, and payment ws taken from their savings. Then ensued a ear of wandering, and it was not possible to deliver the bonds to the men until the Man Diego entered New York harbor i months later. 'envoy duty is exacting, and the men performed it so faithfully that not one attempted to go ashore to deposit his bonds. Nor could they be mailed safely, for ;h ship had no registration ser i e. iot- si months the bonds were carried on board ship, and then came the thief in the niht. A submarine or a floating mine got the San Piego. I ow n she went. i:ix brave men paid toll with their livs, and the rest lost all their belonging', including the bonds. Now, unless con press comes to the rescue, it will have cust these men 110'j.eöi) for serving their country well in her time of need. f course the necessary legislation will prewnt such a catastrophe, but it should evrne soon. There is too much talk right now about what the nation owes its soldiers, and too little concrete evidence of its int ntion to pay.
ONLY HOUR MONTHS MORE.
m:w imv LiTiatATi'iu:. (Ii;dlanadls Neu.) The old poets sanar of ale. grog, wine and 2eer. The modern writers have Introduced whisky and soda. highballs, cocktail and the like into HteraUre. The dramatist frequently makes a tipsy man or woman his chljf character. Pron pleaded for "wine and women and mirth and laughter, sermons and soda water the day after," thereby illustrating his sorry experience. Goldsmith loved old boks. old friends, old wine. Pope spoke of inflaming wine as pernicious to mankind. Douglas Jerrold thought small beerawas a luestionahle buperflulty. Lady Montagu sang to the
J t fleet that "we meet, with champagne and a chicken.
at last." The old friends, old wine and such, are passing. There has been the dawning of a new day and the ration U dry. Another generation will know comparatiely little of intoxicating liquor. The saloon will be a memory, and the "blind tiger" will be a slang phrase of a past age. The dramatists will not portray Intoxicated individuals because they will have no counterpart in real life. The new poets will not sing of nut brown ale and ruddy wine. Something ele besides
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The country is now detinitely voted drv. More thanlv:i; M,U1 5u"-1 41 l" "K "",uuuvru "J lflt
, , , , . , , , li.ovellsls ana snort story writers to urea me mothe requisite thrre-fourths of the states have rallied : otony f ,,,aloßUe. Perhaps, after all. we .hall reach the federal prohibition amendment, others will ratify jthat e.-a of which Jonon sang a wet thought exit during the next few weeks for good measure. It is not pressed in a dry manner: Hkelv trat mure than half a dozen will withhold their p:nk to me onI' with thlne 'ef:And I will pledge with mine; approval. , r ,avo a klss J)Ul ln the cup The amendment d , s net tccornc immediately op- 4nd i n r.ot look for wine.
Judge Gilmer gave a little start and sat up a little stralghter in his Judicial seat, and the reporters grabbed their pencil with an air of extreme expectancy as iH-puty. Pros. George A. Schock made his announcement in city court. "Your honor, this defendant is
charged In the affidavit with burying !
dead bodies without a permit, and as we haven't all of our witnesses hTe this morning the state is forced to ask for a continuance." said the deputy prosecutor. "Don't give a continuance until we pet some oT the details." chimed the whispers of the reporters loud enough for the judge to hear. The deputy prosecutor appeared Insistent that a continuance be granted. It looked pretty seriou. The reporters had visions of a story that would have to do with graveyards on a dark night, caskets, murders committed in the dark hours of the night, and things harrowing like that. "I'll have to know something about thfs case before I can either grant a continuance or fix the amount of thed efendant's bond." frowningly announced the judge, appearing greatly interested in tha case. "Well, your honor, the defendant buried a dead horse without securing a permit. He Is . a garbage man," said the deputy prosecutor. Sulniued groans folowed this announcement. mm Can It be that whoever has the ISoO.OOO vorth of Liberty bonds that mysteriously disappeared ln Pouth Bend recently. figures that $250.000 Is more than $5.000? No, Harold, we don't remember of ever, skating on the Fourth of July, that Is not on ice. C. J. C.
1 The Public Pulse
Communlcatlcnt for this colnmn may be signed nonymontly bet mut be acrotupinled by tbe name of the writer to tenure f-ool fait.. No retpoQilblllty for facU or sentiments exprmed wfti be asunmed. Ilonent dtatiistoo of paMic naeatloo la lanted, but wita the firm referred to eliminate tlcloos and o-bjectiooable matter. Te eolarnn la free. Bat, be reaao Bible.
ASK PAltMEKS TO JOIN IN DITCH FIGHT. Editor News-Times: Matters of vital interest to the farmers of St. Joseph county at this time are the ditch cases, the Dixon W. Place ditch, pending in the Importe circuit court at Laporte. and the Tuesberg ditch pending ln the Importe superior court at Michigan City. These two ditch proceedings are for the establishment of ditches which can in no way "benefit the lands of farmers in St. Joseph, Elkhart, Kosciusko and Marshall counties though practically all the farms in Marshall county, all In the south
ern half of St. Joseph county and I many farms in Elkhart and Kosci- j usko county are assessed with ben- I
ehts on both ditches. The farmers of Union, Madison, Lincoln and Liberty townships in this county should unite and Joiti In a general attack against making any assessments against their lands. The assessments against lands In Mrshall county are approximately $30,000; in St. Joseph county they approximate J25.&00, and in Elkhart and Kosciusko county they are approximately $30,000. These drains if established will cost approximately $-950.000. The farmers of Marshall county are determined to fight. Iast Saturday a meeting of more than 500 farmers was held at Plymouth and all signed up to joiu in a fight against these proposed ditches. They protest against tho unwarranted levying of tribute against lands not benefited and arc preparing to go before the legislature to ask amendment to the present drainage laws which will prevent the unjust practice of continually paying for nothing. They ask the cooperation of all farmers who are unjustly affected by these proceedings. The eommitteo of rcmonstrators of Union township has called a meeting to be held at Lakeville next Saturday at p. m. of all farm ers in Madison, Union, Liberty and Lincoln townships to discuss matters connected with the proceedings and to decide upon what steps they should take to prevent further extortion of money from the farmers without equal benefits therefor. It is believed that by making a united fight, a flht in which every man who lands are unjustly assessed will join, that these proceedings will be defeated. The committee asks that eve: y farmer whose lands are affected by these proposed drains be present and lend his influence In the light against their establishment. COMMITTEE.
Foresight Versus Hindsight
iw m:Tiuci: faihfax. How many of us realize what a magnificent gift lifo is? Life youth. If we have it, or if we haven't, the ability to I'be ; oung." as our "new thought" brethren put 4. We waste God-given opportunities in such vain regrets a. If this were only five years ago. or two years ago I would have done differently. Put I'm afraid jnu wouldn't have done differently, my dear Uueful in. with the preciou gift of hindsight. You would have kept right
on m the beaten track, neslecting to take the good things at hand. Lose, the ability to "be young'." and that rugged optimism that won't take no from fate, life or the nods for an answer. "mir, the tentmaker. when lie rang: "Come and in the fire of Spring jour Winter garment of repentance fling." knew what he was talkirig about. We amateurs in life quote Omar, but a'.l we seen to realize about Spring is that it is time to buy straw hats, or if we're not careful about changing Manuels we're apt to get the 'ip. The other day in Central Park when there was a hint of Spring in the air. out hopped . joyous robin, who seemed to think of life in the terms of Omar. His cheerfully chirruped comments on things m general weir very hajpil received by the lady-robin who condescended to share a woi ni with him. from time to time. The thunder and roar of the city could bo heard distinctly in the park, but it did not trouble the robin and his lad:. "That's all man-made foolishness," he seemed to tell her. as they explored one nook after another, in search of a suitable home, "ull that fuss and noise soinjj on In those piles of tirick and mortar they call that living but you and I know better." Thins That Count. Those wise robins knew that there are only a few things that mf kf' life worth living love, little robins in the nest, the blessed out-of-doors, and the chance to Invite one's soul. They didn't Poem to think much of sky-scrapers, and limousines, and subways, and all the other things artificial structures would build up and imagine we'd die if we had to do without. Why couldn't the thing we call "civilization" ami which certain phases of the war prove is something quite different have left us a little bird-like simplicity? What are our lyest and strongest emotions forever bound up with all sort of material things? The high cost of living, the difficulty of putting aside enough for old iife, and shall a trirl give up a comfortable salary when she marries? These considerations, like giant emery wheels, pass over cur souls and destroy our tiner aspirations. We are too worn with the struggle to take the lesson of the Spring and the robin to heart. The seasons come and go. and we wither away into sterile old age. The Married Woman Tendier. We are likely, before the eventful year of 1918 Is over to have the question of the married woman school teacher, that was fought out with such bitterness in the Metropolita year ago. revived and threshed out on nation-wide lines. Why do we employ an army of statisticians c.enus-takers. and endow research bureaus with huge sums of money to prove that the native-born population, has small families, or rto families at all and then raise insuperable barriers to women, employed in gainful occupations, marrying? That is part of our curiously oblique American philosophy, our utter repugnance to face facts. We complain of the dearth of nativeborn Americans, and then we proceed to do everything in our power to eliminate them. It Is as much to the Interest of this country that we have fine, clean American marriages as that we build ships or drill soldiers. Our vital statistics are not sutliciently American; they are too often made up from groups of people who make their money here, but leave their deepest, patriotic feelings in the older countries. Mum. Itesign When Slio Marries. It is understood, though there Is no actual law on the subject, that when a girl marries a fellow-employe she must resign; in marrying she automatically dismisses herself. And yet "the joint salaries of these vo young people would make a happy American home. I never see pretty blooming girls sitting around boarding houses, or segregating themselves as seems to be. more and more, the custom of our country, without thinking of that line of Bernard Shaw in his play, "Misalliance." I may not quote to the letter, as T haven't the volume handy, but the idea is: "GIrl, girls, all over the country, withering away into ladies." lie doesn't say anything about the tine young men withering away into grim, old bachelors and Imitation clubmen. And yet their fate i the more tragic, since a woman with a book-shelf, a teapot and a spiritlamp may turn a hall bedroom into a near home, but a man cannot. No. he desiccates and withers more pitifully than she does, while together they might find happiness and a home, both of which are the inalienable rights of everyone.
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McCall Patterns and Publications 1st Floor.
GEORGE WYMAN & CO.
Come and mv Us
Jiffy-Jell With Salad Flavor
Jifify-Jell desserts come in many fruit fiayors. But Lime JiffyJell flavored with lime fruit makes the best salad jell. It is tart and green. The flavor comes in liquid form, sealed in a rial. Serye with your salad. Or mix in vegetables, cooked or uncooked, before the Jiffy-Jell cools. Left-
ore r a will do. Ormixin meat scraps and make a meat loaf. Try Loganberry Jiffy-Jell for a dessert, and Lime for a salad jell. One package serves six. . These quick, economical dainties aerre a big need today. 2 Pmckmgf fmr 25 Cmt At Ymwr Crtctr'i Jiffy -Jell Waukeaha, WiconIn
ft rcj
For many years the Wyman Ru, Carpet and Drapery department has been reccgnizrd by people in this vicinity as the best fcr home decoration.
Friday and Saturday finds
attractive offerings in Suits, Coats and Furs at reduced prices
fa The reduced prices on Winter Coui run at si
u mv.uu aiui jv'.uu.
The reduced prices on Women's Suits are Sl.voo vS 19.75, S22.50 and S25.00. Many women will my choose their Spring suits from these groups. Numerous Fur Sets and pieces are now quoted at reductions. Ask to see the special oH'erins.
Reductions Now On All Women's Sweaters $5 and $5. 75 Sweaters, $3.95 $7. 75 and $8. 75 Sweaters, $6.50 $10.75 Sweaters arc $7.75
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Every knit sweater for women anj misses "is now repriced for quick clearance. Most all sizes and an excellent assortment of shades.
New Spring Hats are Here! Priced $5 to $12 Smart chic shapes in trimmed Hats for Spring are here in all Straw Georgette and straw and Satin and straw. The shades are navy, brown, blue, taupe and new Spring ' shades, also black. Trimmed with flowers, wings, ribbon and beads.
In plain models or incy snles. In coat styles with or without belt. Neat pocket ideas and large sailor collars make them attractive. Serge Dresses Taffeta Dresses In Delightful New Spring Models Moderately priced Serge or Tail eta dresses for afternoon and street wear have arrived in delightful new. Spring models. In surplice and draped ei.ect with new sleeve and trimming ideas. These dresses come in the favored new Spring shades. Navy blue is quite prominently shown. Priced SI 5.00. SlO.75, S25.no. S29.75 and S3 5.00. All sizes. 1
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