South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 290, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 17 October 1919 — Page 6

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. THE NEWS-TI.V.ES PRINTING CO. OA il RILL It. LlMLi:s, J r ;.t.

2. M. b'iLi'iIh:.S .v. Tu!. I 'er. i JU1I.N HiJ.NKV ZUVEU. Kilter. '

Member United Press Associations. Mrn'.r, IMItlon. MKMIIKU ASMjCIATI.D I'KKSS. j Tip .1 -'. a tul ITfn 1a fx;ln!vtly er.title.1 the o fori rpa!!ictlon of all up ilsntf rrt-Uud t it or not ,th?r WW rrOitfd in l'.,'.n paper, an 1 . ti.o i-x nl tif puhlliii4 , kr'n. Tülf !- not apply to our fterD.n paper. AT ; rlfiiU f rul li !itl n of i;.'-clal 1 1 - i . t -1 - herein a- r

rvel tj ti. publ!M-rn n to loth clltiOiji.

OPFirK. 210 W. Colf.ir At. ! Phon. Mitn ZPi iTlTrttf bran a fi'-banf. O' opent6 Btrn of PTii -n or .Vpi rtn.Lt minted. I AfU-r a p. m. mil niifit nt: mlers. Main 2100. laMÜVd d-', cirtnt: Main 2lol. . :ty -'ütor; Main 21f-0, Hocletj editor ) , Ilaia 21'TJ. rircTJlulou l-f rttrnt. 1

CU at tfc r?!c or tPpor iboTe nnmbfri and aik for : d artuiT. t uaute-1 I.'ilt -r'i. AdTPtU"ic?. C'lrrulnth-n or A -unthiif. For 'uLt ids." If 7our nin: l.i In the tpaon , ' T-. i .!. v i:i i .-.1 nft-r .rucTti n Report inatt3tloa to bu!nM, b3 fiKUtlon, poor delivery of papert, bid t i 1 Ii r. - M r . t'- . t r, ln-a'l of depai tnvr; with whlrh yoo ! r.i- .! hii' 1 1 Nc Ti:j;ff hi thre trunk Mr ell o vf.!'-h n tyoad to llila 2200. After 8 p. m. call nwjbt nuaaberi, boTe. I

FTnRirTTON RATHS: Mrnlnjr find Armine Edition. Flngl Copy. .V; un-lar. ftc. Idlvr.! by -ajrler In S.,utb I Hn I ati'l M!sl;.iwlva. 57 V per Tnr In ndvurn-r or l.V by tb I Morning ar. I ÜT'-nlng IMttlom, dally lnrlüdlr.fr Sunday, fcy mull and lndle LV) mile frora South Rond, 40- p?r rnontb; 7 two mi-'Tifhn; .T-V pr mnth tbrraft'T. or -M.on per year , In admnrr, 11 otbera br rcnll $0 00 pr yar r rv per raontb. i Kuterrd at tbi .South iUnd postoffice as ond tl:i8 mall. i ADVr.KTISINO RATHS: Auk tb fi lTrt!ln ? dpi rtmnt ' rrrtirn Adr?rt!lrsr UT-enLntlvf a : CONE. LOK ENZEN A ! WM)lMAN. 22.' Fifth At.. New York City, and 72 Adaua Mt.. Cblrpo. Tb Nfw Tln nrtearora f koep Its adrertUlnff ' columns fre from froud'ilnt uiUrpresen tatlon. Any peraon defrauded through patronaf of any nd vertlnint !a th' tapr will confer a favor oq xxianaem;ct by rvportioa? U : cU compleuiy. !

OCTOBER 17. 1919.

WTHOUT MAGAZINES. What would lift- h without, marazinps? Tho pub:r i 'or tr N- aM- to iinswcr this qii'Mion from xjr:-nf- "hf ju hi ih-rs rf narly 2o matrrj.ins haw announci'l th;tt th- Xovrmbrr lssUf.s will ho 1-it'v In fat. somi- of them may not appear for u'm k:, lu yond th ir usual tlmr of hlosFomlns out i.prn thr nciVS-staiulH. And what will tho country do then, poor thins;? rin hridrs hr rnnrriod without hrnffit of editors? 'an the rf ws papers tak up thf rxtra load of fashion iispla and Ifrture.s on how to drapf- thr? wedilirK vei' ami what to huy for thr first kitchen? How ca i tho hahi's ho fod, tho church bazars fTlvrn? How ran wo know tho lato5t wrinkles In lr. ' nd n'riculturo? And what will tho editorial writer do when thor is no ono to put tho blc topics of the day into easily diprostihlo form? And tho movio fan.- how ran thy over wait Jl whole month lnnper to know whrthrr Vivian i. married to Iauncolot Stuhhs and whether Janf Jones o. her divorce? Hut may it not bo possible that . public educated to re.ic4!,-; as a substitute for thought tuny turn to fh rrc.'ul nM bookshelf for a few weeks in search f something to take tho plce of its acriistomed IruK ? Ann may not the reader find astonishment as well as d.'liuht therein? Think of a whole peneration discovering a oneo tlat l)ickens and Victor Huco are is thrilling as Robert Chambers and Harold R ll V. ri-rht! And that tho Hildo is full of stories whos" .ippli: human interest needs no hoxod 'dttoria! blurbs. And that no novel could possibly r. s. er-.t rancinjr as tho lovo-lottors of the Hrownrr:s. that the letters of Matthew Arnold and of IN-ethoven are ful' of deep Ftirrinprs of the heart. And there rr tho essiys of Huxley tho. clear pooN of loic.J be-auty and tho essays of John 1'iske. vhich are bound to make the reader brimr out h;-- own mind for a little exorcise. It is autumn now, and there is a nip in tho air that -ives zosi to the soul as well as to the body. Why no? (ry ;l little cood old-fashioned "solid readiiv;" i'louR with the nuts and apples? The ch..crv t.o-es of the niaf:i7ines will ! n)ne tho les w.diiiiii'' n their turn.

ENFORCE LAW AND ORDER. A' (Vntraha. Wash., a committee of citizens h been formed that t ikes the mind nat k to the old days of the viirtlance committors of tho west, which did so much to force la w-a'ddm--: citizenship upon ertain lawless elements. It' is called The Centralis Citizens rrotriMivo aso (i.ttion. and its object is to combat I. W. W. aetsvitirs in that city, and the surrounding country. It invites to membership "all citizens who favor tho enforcement of law and ord r." And under the heading 1. W. W.. tt includes all elements ofiposrd to such a pro s. Ctadiially. from ib.e chios whicii s emed about to rneulf her. tho cdd. real America i-s be.uinnins to. mer.ee. Tho eai;le is scroa mine in every state in tho t'nion where there is any tendency to up.-et thinprs. It is hich time for the people who do believe in the lawful and or.lerlv conduct of affairs to take tho uppet hand Th-ro h;ts been more than enough o? noting, of obstructive and destructive measures. The United St it es lias a fine, strong constitution, iiul if she has proper i are it will pull her through mythincr: but th re should he no attempt to do. Ice the truth of t In- fact that attempts to ruin that Constitution are part of a carefully oreaniod program, and that program must be foueht actively ur. d b.cc -s arit'v .

LEGION OPPOSES BONUS. li;e ii:o ( i'tivtTiti(Mi of t:ie Atin i ir.ni Legion h is vr itself !io".or '.;.' ! ( :n;:'r to rab'tse the ro. poe"-,1 '.e, i !a f :o n now pen. line in oor.cre-;- for the a I, let t of . 1 m ch Ix-nus to returned service men The decision ;s s .id to t epr sent the m ntini vt rf t!'c it;-; majority of ueb c iti s. Mot of the n.in..rr nv b. vi'leo to i c:n mend tlie .onus announceil that !o u o ,: rel in o'. . .'. :e ; to ir.st rtbtions from tuoir posts, and aeaist tl'.e'.r own convictions. It i.. iikt Iv tr.at p. -sis ;it lio;:;e vv 1 1 ! re or s'der the matt-' r. Tb.e ( o v . e r. ". e n in-'! : b. it .be f :r.' t; u of the Air.i i "'"ei l.'nu: u .,s to '!: s. u:o : f; : into til" o e i p. m e t:t . nor t i k c a wa: 1" ;." V..ry other -;.i'.e h a: ! !'i iun oüa i !; -r u : -

i : irtl! show a sir: '.' t r .!:-: s : ' ( C at t h" At. . nc.iü I. -!'. : ' ' : :.;

to i : s l. . ! w .i r i . !"e-. t ople e,'.; . ., . , ', . t , r . . : " do : v . ..i : ih.i a : rilr;.;! c-' at": try -' a!,;.- to ;: . ''.. t. . v :).- " ' ' bo-., us ..- .. ,f : : 1 ICU.tldft. i'.M tiaie . a ill'l'"'! a I th f tills At ticulv.1 i'l'ioib-d budiv rUI events the ' est foilu

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Gossip and the President's Health. NOTHING strange whatever about the stories that have been current the past wrek about the mental and physical condition of the president. Quite- as we raid at the time of hi? breakdown, it came as a boon to a considerable element which down deep in the heart, hoped that it might prove fatal; so consistently had the green-eyed monster led them to hate his every move. Well, as it developed that it might not, almost certainly would not prove fatal, the monster could no longer hold itself, and so grasping a straw here, there, and yonder, it wove them together, and determined that the place next the grave best fitted for one whom he so despised, would be the bug-house. Sen. Moses of New Hampshire is supposed to be the original author of the yarn, but he probably isn't. It unquestionably hailed from the Tribuna, published in Rome. Some two weeks ago a story came over the cables from Rome in the news services stating that the Tribuna in a fit of anger over the Fiume affair, due to the trouble with d'Annunzio, flew in a rage at Pres't Wilson and referred to his illness, then quite new, as in fact meaning that he had gone insane and indicating that he was perhaps insane when in Paris fighting Italy's claims to the Fium- port. We were asked not to publish the story, and didn't, for the reason of its insensibility. It was sent to throw light on the Italian attitude in the Fiume affair, it even being suggested that in a country where the press is controlled, as in Rome, it may have been given out as propaganda to placate the Italian people temporarily, leaving them to find out better when the truth forced it. They do queer things in Rome. But apparently they are not so very much queerer than some things done by United States senators. Sen. Moses evidently got hold of that dispatch somewhere, and leave it to Moses. Here he was to lead his people out of the land of bondage into the land of promise and so he sat down and wrote it to a constituent back in New Hampshire. II THE Moses letter carries a number of expressions identical with those employed in the Tribuna editorial, such as. "it will be impossible for him to leave his bed for an extended period," and "he will never again be any material force or factor in anything. Such knowledge, or assumed knowledge, would of course, be readily acceptable to the New Hampshire senator. He is anything but friendly toward the purpose upon which Pre3t Wilson s energies have of late been chiefly centered. To know tht he would "never again be any material force or factor" would, indeed, be a balm. He wished it anyhow, no doubt, and to see it in print, ever with the accompanying explanation, was sufficient to his distorted mind to convert it into a fact. III. A r that Sen. Moses has only been instrumental, rather than the chief source of the gossip. He helped out, perhaps, up in New Hampshire. Wqimticipate that the greater damage has been done by utility of the suggestion by stock-brokers and jobbers. For the purpose of shaking up the stock market, or shaking it down, these ghouls of speculation will circulate anything, upon the least excuse, and sometimes without excuse, and with some sort of shop in practically every tewn in the country, using their tickers, you can readily see how easy it is to distribute a yarn, merely as a rumor, perhaps handed out in confidence, and have it certified into a fact the moment it gets outside the door. Many an enthusiastic stock speculator has emerged from a bucket-shop, with some euch rumor up his sleeve, nd by the time he hits the street, forgets where he came from; tells it that he just got back from Washington where somebody handed it to him direct from the bed chamber or the front step of the whu house. David need not have hurried about it when he 3aid in his haste, "all men are liars." IV. A BOUT all th ere is to the president's illness is that he is ill; suffering nervous exhaustion from the terrible strain he has been under, this and from lack of exercise; not keeping physical pace with his mental operations, he came to feel the effect in his digestive organs. We are inclined to believe that it would have done just as well had Dr. Grayson and his associates been a little less mysterious perhaps about their bulletins; a little less secretive. The president s health is something of a rfational matter, and evidently even, something of an international matter, and it should not be held a mystery out of which rumor, hostile, or friendly, can grow. At that the bulletins were explicit enough, it seems, for all save those anxious to see something ominous behind Mhem Sen. Moses, for instance, who had to wait until he had heard clear from Rome to point it out to him!

More Truth Than Poetry By James J. Montague

In

how no Tiun io it? a work on finance by a popular

a n imber of i

and ie- j ! bevond !

writer. 1 lately discovered

schemes IJy which tho tuest stupid norant blihtr Could cather in wealth

I'ropstis's dreams. ! "This author." said I. ' is i shark on tho market. m i He's versel in all systems of pil-i ins up i"-lf. i He tt-lls how to harness a fortune ! and park it. - j

He must have no end of hie money himself. Rut a week later on when we happened to meet He touched me for five said he needed to eat. A motor car expert who writes fcr the papers n technical subjects has recently told

The speediest mode of correcting j thp cap(rs I That cars will cut up when th" ; en pi no oes cold. ' I'll try 'em." I said, as I folded the ; clipping "Hereafter my flivver won't need ! to he towed. He's lucky, that fellow, it must be j just ripping To know how to fix up a v. r on i the road." ! t met him that week as my flivver J sped by. j His motor was stalled, and he didn't !

know why!

I

Some eons a pro. in my youth's early hey-dey I used to sit up until midnight to read A method of getting more money on pay day In a hook that was called ' Seven Ways to Succeed." "That man," I observed, "is a sevenfold wonder. He's learned all the tricks and kinks of the game.

A person so wise couldn't know how j

to blunder Ry now he must be on tho top peak of fame." üut I found later on that the sifted old bloke Had died in the workhouse, disheaijene! and broke.

VIZ:. riLslNKi:. The most cftectlvo flerman propaganda is now barred from America for keeps.

MOHi: ACTION". TOO. P'Annunnzto has discovered that righting wrongs pets more notoriety than writing rhymes.

NO MvII.Ij AT ANYTHim;. TirpiU may tie right in xiying the. Kaiser tried to make peace, and i'alled. He also tried to make war, with the same result.

Tim maccaiiki: South Hend Tent Xo. 1 meets 1st and 3rd Friday evening. Heylcr hall, 120 V.. Wayne st. FRANK ANDREWS. Comm. 6544-17

of recognition. In any event, whether the- bonus is iriv n or withheld, the American le gion will do itself and the nation the highest service by maintaining this honorable position, and refusing to as.k for a i tw.il d-

f

A ROYAL ENGINEER. This 1 . : 1 1 ; of the Iblgians improves on aciuaintan and that means a good deal, when you conbid v tiie luui hold he had on American hearts to bein with, lie is always displuing some new trait or talent. The oilier day, on his lour across the continent, he climbed info the cab of tho locomotive, took tho throtth . ran the train for lt miles without 't jolt, stopped it iMid returned to his tar. Hardly anybody on the train knew anything about it. Albert was die-sed v r much like a locomotive5 engineer, with. a ll.inhcl sliitt and a cap. and nobody recognized him as a royal personage when he climbed down cJt of the engine cab. It was not a bluff, ither. Albert, besides being skili d in uNiation and various other branches of sport und industry, is said to have a thorough knowledge t-f locomotive uiginering. He could probably ha'. giv en the regular ongineet on that train some pointers. an another occasion, when the train stopped in a little middle-western town iusi about davlight. Albert hopped off and started walking up and down tb- platform. IN is always up before laylighb There were many ptople there looking for him, but nobody reco:; ued him. "Ihi ou t'.Pnk the king will come out of his ar'."' .:skd farmer. "No. iaid Albert, "the king's a lazy fe'low. and alwavs lies in bed till le o'clock." A kin.; with a sense of humor is sure'.y a rare biid. liven Albert's strongest admirers had hardly xpeittd to liiid thai merit in him. There has been little i rcnion for humor in his job in these lat voa.s. Rut p -rhaps it is that vry thing that has enabled Alb- rt to keep his royal head on straight d ; oid taking himself altogether too serio;:-ly.

The Tower of Babel BY BILL ARMSTRONG

An organization of blind people who call themselves the Optimists club certainly show the ri-;ht spirit.

The Knife and Fork club has opened its fall season. Thank God! V'll have some nts on the first pag again.

Imagine n man guarding an army camp with the expectation of stealing a mllli on dollars! Whv wr can remember when we couldn't get trusted for a can of sardines in tho same arm v.

Chicago Tribune headline savs: "FORMER 1 It I NC II DUN I MS II F. WIT.N hIVi; AT BAARN." Newspapers make tho oddest mistakes. We wonder how they happened to

gt two "A's" in barn.

and go through an uniquo performance to attract the attention of my man. The dog will be expected to immediately locate the bad roof, and the address will be carefully noted and one of my salesmen will he on the ground in a very short time. Kindly treat this matter as extremely confidential. Unconscious, us I would not care to have my competitors set next to this dandy little scheme. Faithfully yours. . J. F. DONA II Ft, South Rend Asphalt Roofing Co.

ntakti.inc. irTitrn: (From tho Philadelphia Rulletin.) Two school girls presented Gen I'ershing with a large bouquet of rose.? "Cod bless you. my children, ami thank you," he said, as ho killed both girls.

!

King Alert t s.iy- ho never met an American soldu r who didn't know what ho was lighting for That was during the war. however. Since those sol-

UliTs il V e then1, abo.sTii - !"!. i In;:-. ll it.

vamc homo, political and industrial agitator b; n h. devilling their minds until some of . e .!. dar.-er of forgetting what it war? all

Obi Rhen Cutting performs some stra nge stunts every once in awhile. Kb is. 'the makeup man on another nwspaper h-re in town. Here is a couple of int resting paragraphs from an item Kb made upFurther announcment of the plans of the recruiting party while her. will be given out by Mr. Dunnahoo within thf next few days The funeral will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the residence. Rev. .1. N. Greene of the Fir'; M. F. church. officiating. Rurial will be in the city cemetery.

I A I'MItKINS SIV.. When I see a flashy dressel talkative dude I know he must sell tires.

Oil

Gl

0RGE WY

MAN

& CO. H

Co mo and iSee Ui

Every

Friday 2 to 5 P. M. free instructions in Knitting and Crocheting 3rd floor.

Toes

Babv Clothes From Head to

A visit to our Infants' section will impress you with its completeness in pretty dainty things for baby. Everthintr from the tirst undergarment to the outside wrap is here in a varied selection. Dresses and Slips in long or short lengths, in white, pink or baby blue. Hosiery, Booties, Sacques, Bonnets and infant playthings are here at moderate prices.

i Infauts' Section - 2nd Floor X: M if M i & 1 ii I ,v J I i; I jm 1 I Uli lit, 1

- Mi

v vy

antS, MOTHERS' REFERENCE SHELF

TKe Future Hope of the World rest upcm He CkUd oCTcxlxy

Free - Mother's Reference Library Just the thing mothers want to know told in plain language by this country s famous baby specialists. Twenty-two volumes of books written by twenty-two doctors known the country over as authorities on baby health and hygiene. This library i FREE. Books may be taken out on card for a week's time. Saturday Special Items French Kid Gloves Tan color only; regular $3.50 value. Special for Saturday $2.75 Ladies Union Suits Fleece lined; regular $1.25 value. Special for Saturday at $1.19 Men's Union Suits Grey ribbed, fleece lined; $2.50 value, at $2.29 Ladies' Union Suits Heavy fleece lined; $1.50 value. Special at $1.39 Auto Robes Made expressly for Ford cars, cut to fit around steering part, waterproof top. blanket lined. Just the thing for rain and snow. Will keep the driver warm and dry. Equipped with straps and buckles to fasten securely: $6.00 value $4.95 Bed Blankets Regular $6.50. Special for Saturday $5.95 Bed Sheets 81x90. Special for Saturday $1.79 A Growing Rug and Drapery Department for a Growing City

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c : . -r h' s iv d f'G to go to the world's i- . ;.r.d tb. n u.ive it to h-lp huiid a new rt.uriy !-- rs a heaven with base ball

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Ail those

I

J two or three months.

and th'-.r mpathi.'Ts ai boasting that rub ho .i-:e'l two ars :r. Rusia. Well? corpus could not huc bt.cn piled up in

an ori: uTrni. ct. 17. 119. Tow. r of r.abt I. C::y. Sir: As a result of Ne'.-on L. .lone?' slice, s m training a tish hound. I have decided to begin carefully instructing th" first and only roof hound in the world. This dos sdiall be known by the name "Leak" and it will b-"" trained by other exports and also by msolf to run down and 1 ring to light every faulty roof tn the city of South Rend and its suburbs. This dog .-hall be had about the city by on" of my faithful employe. and its training shall be so eonductYd that when the intelligent animal approach within say a half mile of faoitv root' it will btgin to bark

towi:k iinds iii:ri: ) "ONLY ONE THING BREAKS MY COLD!

Wonderful Silk Shirts

$10 and $12

i

That's Dr. King' New Discovery j for fifty years a cold- I breaker" j EEE: NOTHING but sustained quality j and unfailing effectiveness can ! arouse such enthusiasm. Nothing i but sure relief from stubborn old ' EEE coldü and onrushing new ones. , EH grippe, throat-tearing- coughs, and I croup could have made Dr. King's ; New Discovery the nationallj- pop- j EES ular and standard remedy it is to- j day. j Flfty years old and always r- ,

liable. Good for the whole family. A bottle In the medicine cabinet means a short lived cold or cough. 60c. and $1.20. All druygisU. Adv.

Stubborn DoucN Tamed. Positive in action, e: natural, comfortable, pleasant. Dr. King's New Life Pills are a boon to bowe!3 that need assistance. The eliminate

'Yt: especially feature our sio and SI 2 shirts or' jersey the silk fabric most favored this season on account of its rich appearance and beautiful quality. These are the finest and weightiest silks, in rich high colors; very specially priced; worth easily Sl3.5o to S 1 5 on the basis of the present value of these fabrics. You haven't seen such beautiful shirts this season at $10 and $12.

You'll also find very beautiful crepe de chine and broadcloth shirts; both weaves in tremendous demand this season. Priced exceptionally low at $10 and $12.

Sam'l

piro

&

Co.

fermenting waste and pu; the sys

tem in normal shape. 23c. a bottle.

All druggist's

HI New things in scarf pins, cuff links and other smart jeweiry.

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