South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 81, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 March 1919 — Page 4
SATl ItI.V .MTi:i5.V(0. MAIU.1I 22, 191.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS - TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. THE NLWS-TIMI-S PRINTING CO. GAUKILL Ii. SLMMEIiH. I'ri -lent. J. If. hTfcrm;,SO.N. I'nbllihcr.
de-
i rppuüaration or ;ot tt4 by tLe puwitn as to lot
OfFICK: Horn lIoce 115L
more than the rcqtii.site number of states, and
' 'i Ji n i h im1 um win. it ui ine niinrJn. Ilho l' Itl ji.'I, which was tho List of the tlr.lrtfcn j original Ftatr-s to ratify thr constitution of th Unitr! .-talrs shows a haract rlt!c lack of taste and rnthus-i larn aboJt thla latest amendment She Is disposed to!
tv rt-irc f t ? ..... .
4u j.-iiu'i. fiue.-iion us validity. A resolution U iendlnk' In the
Mate ?sriUtur which. If approved, will call upon tho attorney general to Lrinjr suit on Lehalf of lihode Island before the .supreme court of the United States asking to liave tho prohibition amendment declared unconstitutional. Thi Pförns to create the odd situation of questioning tho constitutionality of the constitution itself, a view, however, rath'r Lefrcint? the question, which i whether the- amendment has any right to be in the constitution at all. The Rhode Island legislators object that cfincrcFs hal no rifcht to submit such an amendment to the 5-tates-, b. ciu.v it is of a nature tending
of frovernment that
Member United Prett Associations. Mominz r!itl n. Mr.Mnnit. a:iati:i prtnss. Ao.'j.it.J I'ftm li exfJristvpJy rntit;.; to ttf n for rP'jbM flti ij f t ail q-ux tiivl.n'-.VH rrr!iu.! to Ji or r.ct r th-r-credited In thi T ft rv t m n ' 1 a ) s
trltw Tbl doi it plIt to nur rYlcrnv n tawr. All
l!-r it -um Urt'.a are re-
210 W. C-jIfflX At.
P;; Phon! 2100.
The Melting Pot COME! TAKÜ rOTLUCS with ra
How the members of the Kappa I'hi Sigma sororlety initiated a number of their girl candidate?, and how they took them to the Oliver hotel for a part of the Initiation work, and how the girl candidates donned the uniforms of the hrtei b ii hops-, and
Tlic Abandoned Room A Mystery Story by Wadsworth Camp. (CONTINUED.)
SYNOPSIS. B-ofy n.irmnm t mtpeetM r.f tbe murder of hit grandfather. Sll.is Blackburn, who was found da4 with a miall bole at the hare cf Ma brain, in an abandoned and locked room of b!s borac, the Cedars. Circumstantial erldence pnlnta to the pullt of Hobby, who 1 unable to establish an alibi ai a result of
log of memory after a night of "gay life" in New York, ppent In company cf l'araJea. from Panama, and Marie, a
Call at the c!v cr telephony bore ruralcr and ft' trT Cfpartrnat want1 Kdltorl.il. AdTerti-ln? Cifiilatluo r Arrouutlng. hV.r "want aIi." ir your r.am ii l'i th telephone Cirectory. b!ll m ,m rr..ii:.l after ir.mrtfon. ',f'-t inittenlloa to taiBM. ba.I execution. r.o-;r dpllverr ef i-nrr. b.nd
ar? 4ealtcr. Th Nea-Tim- 1, tl;irtn trank !!ce. all of , to alter the established svsiPm
T.ua reapocd to llorue Phon H.il an bell 210O.
PrH?Cnn-rif)N HATES : Mrnlna: nl I? n'rg HdlttATH. Jnf. Copy. .V; Sunday, fc. IIlreied br crrlr In SoTith J'n i ml f I . v . ... . . . - . . . . r. v. ..
, - '" .1 j. i.'v per yar in nnxza. or i.x: j iuri
1 , IISill III
how Fred Hos' ov.ner cf tl:o bailors ;fnn!a nornan. IU awakea In a do
furniture store and who is also the man who ha?i nominated already two of South Ik-nd's future iii.ior.-. and how Mr. Hose :illed a suitcase full of bricks and walked into the hotel just lik- he was an incoming guest, and how two of the girl candidates
;Vorn,nir and KTenlnjf IMitin &y roa.i. On rer month; To-- two rn ;t,
tho act in question Is an unwarranted invasion bv the I attired in bell hon uniforms met him
federal government of the police nowcrs of the in-lal th" tloor of thf" hotel lovby and
t'Jok the suitcase tilled with bricks and i tried to lift it up to the desk of the
K "! ni.r.fH trio n -
4 - pr y,,ar lr adrrnc-. Entered at th iuuth Iienj ponloSlce aa ax,nJ rlam mat'.
ADTTTHTISING It ATI'S : Af.k th a'!-ert1i-.r department, trnr ?D,f."r,lslnif lCeprentatlTa: (MM:. LC KUNZ F.N & S?1'5"23 Iifth AT- -nw Vork Cif. and Adv. Bid, wnirago. Tno Newa-Tliru endeTora t kep Its ndrertlalnz ru.fimn fr- from franl'iint rnireprffntatl'n Any person ,!a ,?. throui?Q put n-najre of aar adrertiftemf r.t In thla l''1;' H ?ntr a faror on the msnaeement by r?purtlns the facta completely.
powers
dividual states. This amendment has gone the way of every other
MARCH 2 2. 1919.
THE NEW PRICE LEVEL. .Many people who keep hoping that prices will drop to fcomcwhere m-nr their pre-war level base this hope on tho fact that our currency ystem at present is highly inflated. Thi Inflation is bound to .stop soon, they trg-ae. Then, with lers money and credit' available, the
price of nearly everything will go down accordingly.;
Now, our currency is tvitainly inflated, admit prof. Irving b isher of Yale. TPjt he does not agree that there is polng to be any let-up. The government tried to lorcc a deflation after the Civil war, he recalls, by reducing tho quantity of greenbacks Wi circulation; depression ensued immMjiately, and congress had to forIdd any further reduction. -Against any considerable reduction in bank credit," he nays, "we lind the hob? business community in arms." And without such a reduction there'ean be no general fail in prices:. There la a 'world-wide cans', too, operating to maintain and even to continue swelling the general volume of credit. Deposit banking, he points out, has increased gre.itly during the war, in response to government demands In all the warring countries, and it Will increase vastly heafter. Money goes out of circulation and out of unprofitable hiding places into bank vaults, and there becomes a basis for new circulating credits. Kven the Chinese and the people of India are learning. This new habit will lead to a great currency expansion. "It is as if a new source of gold supply had been discovered." Nobody then need talk hopefully of the prices of 1913 and 1314. It is futiie to try to bring them back Buyers have been trjirg it, with insignificant results. There is a new high price level, maintains this expert, and it will prove to bo a stubborn reality. Tho clever business man, he .ays, is not the one who waits to buy raw matrrials or manufactured articles he needs, but the one who accepts the new price facts arid act accordingly. This testimony gives rtrons support to the iuy now movement already under
amendment that haa been inducted Into the constitution since Khode Island tardily came in on the
original. This is a republic, basically democratic, and
we can have anything in the constitution that we want, when consress so resolve:-", submits Its resolutions to the states, and three-fourths of the state legislatures approve. That is all there is to It. We can put It into the constitution, following that process prescribed in the constitution itself, if congress and a three-fourths of the states should declare, that no citizen should have than one eye. No cheaper brand of sophistry was ever indulged in by any one, than that of the anti-prohibitionists, seeking to bolster up hope against the amendment, and its eventual effectiveness, by talking its unconstitutionality. An infringement upon the "police powers of
the states" is it? That is what the south, and even the
supreme court said of the fugitive slave law, but that was a statute, not a constitutional amendment and a supreme court decision was set aside, and a statute upheld by four years of bloody war, and then a constitutional amendment, which taught a lot of "states rights" gentlemen that secession doesn't pay. We wonder if Uhode Inland means to secede if she fails to have the prohibition amendment junked; the sweet little thin. If she decides to press the matter it will be a ca.se of real interest, both In the court and in the aftermath. Few citizens, however, un-be-fuddled'by booze, will lie awake nights to worry over tho outcome. Only those to whom the "wish is father of the thought," and occasional lawyers as they "straightway dream of fees," have the least doubt but that the amendment will stand for all time.
aerft-i pna k ne.-r the Cedars and goes to tie house, whore he meets his rousln. K.ithtrlnp. r.n.i (Jraham, a friend. All; iivT ti,at mystery surrounds the rth j -f t. o3 1 wLo was one of iji.mv I'.iaekbyrn 11 In gnai nunn.. '
:;r;in,o s!;b lnvrrlaldy mark t.u s-.a ? ü .-rath iu ue room.
jc a-
long-distance diagnosis. A new way to summon the doctor's aid in emergency has been found in the wireless message. A transport recently docked in New York reports that while at sea It received a wireless telegraph message from another vessel, the UritLsh steamer Pollac. A member of the Pollac.'s crew, had been taken suddenly ill. There was no physician aboard, so the cail for help was cent out by wire!es. Tho doctor on the transport was given the symptom. He diagnosed the case and nt bac-t a wireless message explaining the -proper treatment to be followed. The two ship kept in touch, the doctor on the one receiving- hourly reports from the tick man on the other. In two days marked improvement was reported and the last message indicated rapid recovery. Of course, if a surgeon's hand ha.d been needed or certain unavailable medicines had been essential to
Having signed the armistice to avoid a most awful licking, Germany is now wondering whether it wouldn't have been easier to take the! licking.
Surely there ought to be a war medal for the veterans who have gone over the top in all these war fund campaigns.
Turkey must be very much subdued. Haven't heard a gobble out of her for six months.
Other Editors Than Ours it
GOODRICH AXI THi: SOLDIKUS. (Indiana Dally Times.) Gov. James P. Goodrich demonstrated to the people of Indiana exactly how much regard he has for returned soldiers Saturday when he refused to receive a concurrent resolution from the legislature making it compulsory for returned soldiers and sailors to have the. opportunity of accepting or rejecting the oil inspection jobs created by the legislature. The governor not only disclosed by his refusal to accept this resolution that it is his intention to use these oil inspection jobs for the perfecting of his political machine, but he demonstrated that his word could not be relied on, even when it referred to the carrying out of republican platform pledges. In a luncheon address to members of the republican legislature at tho Columbia club, Jan. 15, Gov. Goodrich said: "I am asking them (the legislators) to take off my hands and place in safety tho department of oil." etc. The legislature, in spite of the protests of thoe who opposed tho governor, did not "lake oft his hands and place in safety" the departmert of oil. Instead, by means of an "Interim" measure It provided thousands of dollars for oil inspection by politicians whose appointment the governor can control. The governor did not'veto this bill. Put when, several days after, an opportunity came to the governor to require that there "soft Jobs" be given
hotel otücf, and how later Mr. Hose took the girls into the hotel cafeteria and treated them to chocolate sundaes, all last Tuesday night has already been told, but the thanks of the girl candidates and the other members of the sorority, wrought in poetic form and dedicated to the genial Mr. Pose has never been male public, and we are permitted to give it a first run production. Here it is: "Tuesday night at half past six. We made three girls do some awful trick., Dil our sorority!
"We made them don the porters' I
suits,
And carry the bags and shine the boots, Dil our sorority!
"It is
"Katherlne! Hartley!" he called. He heard running steps upstairs. Katherlne leaned over the banister. Her quiet voice reassured him. "Is the doctor with you?" He nodded. Paredes yawned and lighted a cigaret. He settled himself in an easy chair. Hobby and Dr. Groom hurried up. Katherine led them down the old corridor. Two chairs had been placed in the broken doorway. Graham sat there. IK arose and greeted the doctor. "Nothing has happened since I left?" Hobby asked. Graham thook his head. "Katherlne and I have watched every minute." m Dr. Groom walked to. the bed and for a long time looked down at Howells. Once he put out his hand, luickly withdrawing it. "It's simply a repetition," he said
! at last, and his voice was softer than
its custom, "it may be a warning, for all we know, that no one may sleep in this room without attract-
.i .u.. , i. ' "-"g death. et why should that be? confessed by those who took . . .. i I miss this poor fellow's materialistic
Tly our sorority! ''Put even so, we lidn't fix That suitca.ie full Of heavy bricks. Not our sorority!
Pe
Tl ... " . . . ... I viewpoint. There's nothing I can do That these three gms were made' ,
. ior nun, nuwwr.g i can say, except t lie goat, .1 .... v, ,.., I. . . . r
l n.ll (IIMIII III 11. -v. ö. rw itSilill IUI il man to place in the electric chair.' Graham touched his arm with a,:: odd reluctance. "fitting here for so long I've been
i thinking. I have always, been ma
terialistic, too. Tell me seriously, doctor, do you believe there is any psychic force capable of killing two men in this incisive fashion?" "No one," the doctor answered, "can say what psychic force is ca-
for which Pabjo of doing, b'ome scientists have started to explore, but it i-i still uni charted country. From certain
that as it may, we enjoyed tho
joke. As did you, is the only hope Of our sorority! .
"And this is the way we take to say.
We enjoyed the -cream you did pa y. For our sororitv!
j places I dare say you've noticed it '"Twas a eostlv tip we must admit, me gets an impression of peace Put the weight of those bricks most !-d content; from others a deprescaused a lit sion, a sense of suffering. I think we
havu all experienced psychic force to that extent. Pemember that this
You played a joke but paid the ""
prjCe j rcocnious suuering. orne 01 it i And for that' we think you're pretty 1hav-' seen with my own eyes. Your ni j father's tight for life, Katherine, was
In our sorority!
a joke
the man's recovery, the simple wireless messages would
not hivo letn sullicient lo save his life. Since it waslt returned soldiers and sailors, the governor refused
chiefly a matter of careful diagnosis and special treat
merit tho directions were easily given at long distance. II re is a use for the wireks w hich it Is strange no one has practised before, it is one not likely soon to be forgotten, however. - Kven though long distance diagnosis may not be the best kind, it i- certainly bet
ter than none when be e currency.
to deprive the politicians of their "pap." , At the same luncheon where Goodrich made the statement quoted above, he was hailed by "Indiana's greatest war governor." It is significant that the hailing was done by John C. Ruckelshaus, a republican politician of the old school. Gov. Goodrich may be the "greatest war governor" from the viewpoint of the politician, but would Morton ever have turned down the hoys who saved the nation
Does our sorority! "Just say the word and we'll make you, Tho only male member of our crew, Will our sorority! "Wo need a mascot every day Especially one whose willing to pay. Does our sorority! "With these few words, we'll say adieu; We'd lie to initiate you too In our sorority!" Friday was the official first day of spring and we forgot to say anything about it, but we promise to warn everybody in time of the approach of April Fools day. C. J. C.
Every now and then Frank Pill,
the Nutwood poet, just has to have
horrible lor those of us who knew he had no chance. As I watched beside him I used to wonder if such violent agony could ever drift wholly into silence, and when we had to tell him finally that the fight was lost, it was beyond bearing." "If these men had been found dead without marks of violence," Graham said, "I might consider such a possibility. Irrational as it seems." "Irrational," Dr. Groom answered, "must not be confused with impossible. The marks of a physical violence, far from proving that the attack was physical, strengthens the case of the supernatural. Certainly you have heard and read of pictures being dashed from walls by
invisible hands, of objects moved i
about empty rooms, of cases where human beings have been attacked by inanimate things heavy things hurtling through the air. Some scientists recognize such irrational
hU Fay. Under the title of "Next (possibilities. 1'olicemen don't.
jv,ly Maybe," he sends us the folto llowlng: The vaudebllle artisr reached his home (The hour was 1 a. m.) And as he mopped his perspiring dome His good wife said: "Dear Im, Ilere.s tea and steak with French fried spuds. What elBe do you want, dear?" "Gee, kid," said Hem, "a tub of suds, Fume good pre-wartlxne beer."
the re is no other way to meet 'as Goodrich did the boys who fought the Huns?
Tin: m:jj ;i:hma ni:Fi:iii:xprM. (New . York World.)
EVERYBODY SHOULD SEE THEM.
When Matthias Krzberger. head of the German arm-
Any community wishing to. can eee the war movies jice commission, tells a Perlin meeting the conditions
i which must and must not be included In a peace
taken by the government. The only necessiry equipment Jectlon lantern of which there
lighting arrangement from the oil lamps of the country vhool to the electric devices of the most modern t (liege. Millions of dollars have been si er: taking the pictures and they show on the screen all that the home-
a J - - 4. T" !
staym; American longed to see. i ligation to mase reparation; mat r rent n ,",.rr,., a .fti.il.. ...rr.rM.,n.t.. i i f., s. !cl lims affecting respectively the Phineland
. , !t. , , Will Ir treated as "crime. and that Cermany must! th buildinK of villages for war work, which grew :u!to pWvn Immcdiate admisson'to a League of Nations.: like mushrooms over night, shipbuilding, great en- Jt is the German way. both In diplomacy and in war,!
gincering feats at home and abroad; transportation of t i draw- up formulae which can be contemplated by I
Of!
scnio sort of pro- treaty acceptable to Germany, he is speaking, as he has . (.spoken before, to comfort Germans with the illusion of is a type to suit any n r,.maininff power of resistance which they know they
do not posses-?. It gives momentary solace to what is left of German pride to hear that Germany has no obligation to give compensation for acts committed after the first -German peace proposal In December, 1916; that the
la..e of Pclgium is the only
one involving moral ob-
or Polish or Danzig
A COMltlllTlNfi MESSAfiE. Mr?. Ca: idy Norah is takm' on awful. Her husband's got three years but he can get wan off for good behavior.
Mns O'Prlen Tell her to ret. !
aisy. Sure an' he may net behave himself. Poston Transcript.
"Verv well." Graham said itub
bornly. "I'll follow you that far. but you must show me In this room the j sharp object with which these men j
were attacked, no matter what the force behind it." The doctor spread his hands. His Infused eyes nearly closed.
(Continued tomorrow.)
A UHSOLVK. "She Is a proud beauty. Last night we parted in anger." "I guess so. Put I think I'll stay mad about a week and spend some of my money on myself." MOHFJ IXMM.ISIDIKNT. (Py Jimmy Walters.) rreathes there a man with soul so dead. Who to him-vMf of late's not said: "July the first Is coming fast. I only hope the stuff will last!"
men and supplies; hospital scenes, and finally, our armies in action on the field.
Germans as infallible and Immovable, vhat happens to them afterward.' i When the peace conditions dictated
regardles
by. the Eu-
Pellevlng that everybody in the United States should yopean allies and the UnPed States are presented to se thtse pictures both as matters of deepest public the German peace delegates there will doubtless bo . ..l I,
a great paraae oi inee otnuiin lurmuur, together
interest ar.d because of their great educational value.
.with darkest prophecies of what will happen in Ger-
1 . . t . ;
me gof.nm?nt is urging mat every community nav- unless the allied demands are relaxed.
ing a place where moving pictures are or can b shown, shall show them. lixhibitiuns ar to be free to the public, for to them the pictures belong. Information about securing the films and their exhiMtbm can be hd by writing to
the Bure.tu
cf Education at Wa.-hintom
UNCONSTITUTIONAL CONSTITUTION. Antl-proh;bitionist ar- i::deed having a great tim in thvir sophistical light xKaiiit the eicht- nth amend'
meet to tho federal constitution, already ratified
j Then, as the allies and the Lnited States remain' 'f.rm, it will suddenly appear, as it has appeared be-1 .fre, how greatly the German formulae can becomes j modified and fitted to enforced necessity without put- I
ting bolsbevism in supreme command or even referring
matters directly to the German people. Tho great, compelling, popular referendum in Germany went or. record last summer and fall when the German nation drew back In utter exhaustion and rfus-tl to keep the German military machine In fur-th-r action. That referendum i. still strong enough to carry frni inv thri-inh tn 4 r:ir that, to be hist. 1 hnn!
to be onerous from every German point of view.
ukraine reports are very Conflicting
PARIS, .March 22. Pre Odessa reports as t the situation In tliat iart of the Ukraine arc conflicting. Gen. Finncliit d'lpcrey, the allied coin-I'lamler-in-ililcf i the near cat, as expected at Odessa Thurtday, aiul It is bilicutl tliat important decisions arc awaiting his arrival. La Llbcrte J-a tht nil inforinntlon concerning tho possible evacuation of Odessa by tlx." utiles is irem.uurv. The greatest difficulty of the allied forces there, tho nespair say, arise from the lack of food. The palr bvliee that if the allies do have Odosu they will retain !scHiMopoI and other Urate lc limits.
Get rid ofthat dandruff with
Kesinoi
Dandruff often causes irritation of hc scalp followed by the loss of hair. It should receive careful treatment. For best results wash the hair with Rcsinol Soap and occasionally touch :he pans of the scalp where the danirufl appears with a little Kesinoi OintTicnL Usually tS's trea'.mtr.t viffcsful protnpt!y-tSe hair arrt a' s'.o5y and oft, arxl the Ka'.p regale its normal sk:n health. Sti'J ir all druggist:, f'rr frtt xamfUt urUt Ktum, fioJ.'nutrrf, .1 J.
When In need of a purgative, do not resort to violent cathartics, but take the gentle, natural laxative
Beecfyam's Fills
Urg Ht Sl cf Abt Mncm in th WerU SU vcTTwhcr. la Eojm. 10c. 21.
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