South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 202, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 20 July 1920 — Page 6
Ti'ii.v Moi'.Mvc. .iuuv 20. it?o
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES !
Morning Evening Sunday THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO. ;.UiKli:i. I: M .MMKK. I'r .M: t J. M. S'IK!'Jli;iN r:iM!vfr JOHN' MUNia Zfvr.lt, Kditr.
Member United Press Associations. m r.MiU'.i: asm) iam.i ri:r.s.
rvrioiiM'y y he purdlr and the .lu'hritlea. A mere nv r.th or s r f open-car "priority" will hardly ?ol ve, th- whole iicMcm.
TJi A I'ri-i l 1 1 : l v f 1y ..r'H!"! f n fr rn-,.:,:ivitln rf n! nm '.t ; n t- 1: ( ri"1 !?! rt it l1"r ,'t""rI reditu": In f.M i l r, er.. I aM f - l:ii P1 , Tli! de- riot nj-r'lr !- rt.-':i-" 'i I 'Ppr- Al' j rrM r,f rfiii.iiit:.., rvf r,. (-.i .''s. it.!..- i.ereui ar re- I
rrd by tie pul -!iir m t. ...tj n.
.1 d-
OYVU'F.. 210 W. .r,!f1T A v. I'h "!. Main Cl r iTIrst- rir.'h x i: 1 n C
ram or r.r..Q or de,.irt rr.r!f wanted Aft- S p m rali ti.jrrt r.ümM. MMri ?1W. r!aMif.1 fl Mrfmnf: .Main 21fl. itv .ümr- Min 21 ."-1-ty editor
Mtn circulation. .i -r : rtm-nt. lT.rntiTinS l:Ti:S: Mr.rrdnsr and rnlnr Filter Mnde Opr. ?.e J-cirJir. f TeUvrrl .v arriT In South an 4 M!hsw'...i. T'Vi j er vt-ir In adr-Te.. 1" r "ek Mrrdnjj or K-.r-nin Kinirrm. dnllr indudlr.j: Sundt J'T m.iil. Knterp-1 at the South Pnd totr, n ic-nd el.in mall.
1 3 A 4 6 K 7 A. H
1 yr .' , lt 7 r-
0i
rt Tr:s. ; !o 's 3 7.
4 JA
1 .'-o 1.7:. 2
Koiflwn nt $l.t' pr moTitfc.
1 M. 70 to
ADTRnTISINfJ It ATI:?: Alt the ivrtl8inf dprtn-r.r. FnrIjrn AdTrt1s1nar nepentatlTef : PONT. T.OTlFNZr.N A H'oof,fA- 2"J."i Fifth v. .u- York T1 Vi.ou vt . M Th N-ws-Tlm- enie : t. 1. i. )t vfrtlilnjr I'lmni fr frnrn fruhiln? mlirppi .'entdtfrtn. Anj person ffiiirl t! r ueh r'ttronnr nor ixlrrt l"-" " ' Trr will rorfor m faror on ti a..ie.-!u.-ui L ri'vruu; tüe farm completely.
JULY 20. 1920.
GERMANY MUST OBEY. The news came wiih i wflcome sound thit th allies had adopte-l a irmptory tone toward th German government In th matter of rarrylnj? out the terms of the Versailles treaty. Jnveatlsations hAve. proved that Germany has been not only Ux about the fulfillment of these terms, hut so extremely negligent as to seem deliberate In the failure to met her Agreement. Sesenty-tvvo naval vessels that should have been turned over to th allies have been retained, for example, and there are still 7.S50 airplanes In violation of the terms. Cannon and small arnxs have been withheld in large number?, and scores of thousands of soldiers in excels of the number allowed have, been kept under arms. The new agreement which the (lermans have been forced to ign. and whieh they signed under protest, contains the folluwln provisions. Germany must: 1. Immediately disarm certain of its forces, including the, security rollce. 2. Publish a proclamation asking for the immediate flirrender of .all weapons and firearms in the hand. of the civilian population. o. Abolish Immediately compulsory service. 4. Surrender to the allies un and cannon which it possesses above the limit fixed by tho treaty of Versailles. Moreover, say the allies: "If on Oct. 1 the German army is not lrdu-d t ' 150.000 men, the allies will proceed to occupy German territory in the Kühr or any other part of German territory, and will not evacuate it until all thir- conditions of the present agreement have b.en fulfilled. The flermans ?ouc;ht for loophole and trchni2lities. as usual, to c-.cnpf mcetinc: their Just obitations. JuMi-'e- and honyr. apparently, hae no more power to move them than of yore. Fear Is tho only weapon of any avail. Fear, therefore, the al-II.-i. . . i . .: i. a . . ...iv. v, ,
, . ii.it" neiiueu 10 ue. hiiii lu.- ir.ii uuiiil; ioiiu in fore- if neres.-iry. Americans can but admire tho stand of tho combined powers who have taken matters into their hand- in ?o summary a fashion, though owin to falhire to ratify the treaty, they have no power to add u eicht of American votes to this just and noce.ary action.
COAL PRICES. Col prlee. for l ot.-, anthracite and bituminous, are extraordinarily huh. Coal i also extraordinarily scarce, for This 1 1 m of the year, with a prt-atf r scarcity foreshadowed for next winter unless somehow production hall be speeded up. ThV coal dealer? are coming in for bitter criticism, and the mine operators for still more eriti'-ism. Consumers cenerally b'amo the former, and the former blame tho atter. No!.ody knows what coal Ls noinc to cost next week or next month. It d p nds on the "situation" i.t any pirticutar tlm; an! there is a general suspicion that the prie situation is determined by th o i: 'tor more than they will admit. It do not follow thit when -oal is twice as s'arce ujinl. It should necessarily he twice as l.ifih. In the cne of nu fs-en:lil a commodity, tho ;idatory rule all the trattic will bar" should lio ! r.r er apply, and no properly organized society with r. properly functioning o?rnn:ent will let it apply. l.'ndubtedly cc .-. I cos's more I c ause of higher wflfs ard other producing xpeie. I'r.doubtedly to this increase :" nrrr-ril cos's must ! added pomethir.c for the lr.cn a.--d oerhead f Vier.se per ton to which the r" are sul-j-. led by forced Idleness much :" ti M:;.", f-r In k of cars to haul the coal away. I?ut th . are all factors which can b letermir.ed by fair ;r.d thououKh inu'airy. And it yist a irnpcrtac.t to see th it mo undue profit shad be mr 'or f-i! a tt is to ,-e that the necessary toantity real shail be mtnd and distributt d. The ei.lrt coal ;tu.i 'lor. needs to be taken more
THE ELECTRIC CHURN. Tb.fr i a most attractive picture In the Popular cince Monthly ff a little girl dr5sed. In her best, hair curled, fdiinins: pumps displayed to adv&ntaRe, sitting readina:. while beside her an electric churn work merrily away. ' This little ?ady should worry If her mother tell her to run along and churn the butter," :ys the story. "She takes her electric churn into ro parlor, hitches it to an electric llifht rocket, turns on the switch, and the churn goes to w..r' The ,.njy trouble with this churn is that there ar K- of it. Still fewer are the farm homs in which the parlor has the e'ectrlc socket. And If there w a sock', anywhere around the place at all. there oucht to ha on In the kitchen for operating the dishwasher and the handy motor which peels potatoes, works the food-chopper, sharpens knives and runs the sewlnsr-machlne. There ousht to be a separate laundry' with its motor washer and hlg lroner and little electric hand-Iron. And wherever in this broad lAnd there ls a carpet or a mattres., there ought to be a vacuum char.fr. "Hut I can't afford all those expensive things." sifihs the average housewife, "some of them cout over $100." "I cannot afford not to have them." answers the wise woman. "I make everyone pay for Itself." In all the discission of the hard life of the farm woman, one thing stand's out: llore than anything els, she needs the electric Mvant..
SERVICE MEN'S BENEFITS. War veterans have got Into the habit of thinking. and Faying, that their country has not done anythin? for them, and shows no slpns of doing anything. The Rocernment certainly haa been remiss in many mattere, but It has not been so negligent as some critics would have the public believe. One indication of governmental helpfulness is found tri the announcement that since March of 1919 more than 900,000 ex-service men have found employment through federal bureaus and welfare agencies. Another, still more Impressive, is found In tho report of the federal War Risk Insurance bureau, which shows that up to June 30 of the present year the government had Issued 4,6151,000 insurance policies to ex-service men, amounting in all to tho enormous sum of $40,285,000,000, and had paid or was preparing to pay 128, 3C0 claims of Insurance on account of deatn. All of these millions of policies are Issued to the war veterans on much better terms than they could be obtained from privat companies. Never has any nation made such liberal provision for compensating Its war heroes and their families for death and disability. Along with these services, hospital facilities and vocational training for disabled veterans, though flow in starting, are; steadily growing in scope and efficiency. All of these things are to be considered along with the demand for a -bonus, so loudly voiced by many of the eervlce men. If a bonus is to be granted, It will be granted not In leu of all other compensations, but as an addition to compensations already far more extensive and liberal than wero provided at the cloe of any previous war. Do not blame the administration departments for what the congress has not done.
SPANISH WARSHIP VISITS CUBA. A Spanish warship is aain in duban waters, the first to itt Havana since Spanish-American w ar da s. The vessel, instead of being greeted by shells, was Kien a lordial reception, and a lonr list of entertainments has h'-en arranged for the efheors and crew. Attention is called to the change thot has occurred in Sair by the friendly feeling thus shown for tho Si anlards by the people who only a little more than two decades ago hated them W!th s-uch good reason. Freed from the dithVulties tli.it .surrounded her attempt to govern rebellious colonial subjects. Spain has gien more thought to the condition of her people at home, with the result thit much progress has been made toward the advancement of their happiness. Her colonial empire destroyed, Spain has gten her attention to home affairs and ceased to disturb her neighbors. So the defeat the Spaniards suffered at our hands in 1S?S was a blessing not only for the colonies that were liberated Cuba. Torto Itico. the Philippines and tluam but for Spain hfro!f.
HISTORY AND MUSEUMS. It is a satisfaction to citizens In other parts of the country to know that Missouri is now founding a museum which will house many specimens of the handicraft of early settler across the Mississippi river and in the valley of the Missouri. There will be Interesting pieces of furniture and interior woodwork, and other relics of pioneer days. The United States is still a young nation and perhaps cannot be expected to appreciate fully the value of its historical treasures and mementoes of a brief but interesting past. Because this country has developed so swiftly from a pioneer country to a land of wealth and power, many of the things which helped to bring about that prosrerous growth have been swept aside and lost forever in the onrush of modern things. It ls well, then, when the citizens of any locality recognize the historical value of their section's development and set about deliberately and thoroughly to preserve ome of the relics which mark the stages of that development. A local museum filled with a wdse selection of objects of historical value would be an excellent gift for any community to make to the whole nation.
If Holland grants the request of the former crown prince to be released so he can come to tha United States, what will we do with the freak? The dime museum has passed out of existence.
Other Editors Than Ours
HAS Tili: HONOR SYSTKM FAILED? (Chicago Post.) A dream of Idealists and humanitarians that failed. So Warden Murphy of Joliet penitentiary brands the honor system in state prisons. There Is not a prison in the country in which the honor system has fulfilled expectations aroused by claims made for It. he t-ays. I5ut there is a point in the failure of the honor sysum If it has really failed which needs to be cleared up before it is condemned. Xo system is 'okely to work as the originators proposed if the administration ls placed In the hands of men who are. either hostile or tolerantly skeptical of success. Probably thn warffen of Joliet prison who sneers at the dream of Idealists nd humanitarians embodied in the honor system did not intend to betray cno of the chief underlying causes of the failure he discusses. Hut the "I-told-you-so" attitude is po plain that he unwittingly does. The world Is moving forward, and those who dream of ideals ani follow fumanitarlan tmpulsr are helping It to move upward., too. The honor sstem cannot be a ucces3 unless specific and easily recognizable differences etween the convict and the citizen at liberty are wiped out. The honor system recognizes that the difference th.it distinguishes them most is directly traceable to prison environment, and it seeks to remedy it. And before itlng down the f.r.al conclusion it i? Just as well to considerately weigh all the elements that enter into big prison discipline. To expect men. cor.xicts or otherwise, to complacently compose thfir minds to acceptance of any program of dis--ciplJr.e and maintain cheerfulness under it is expecting" too much.
rhe Tower of Babel By BILL ARMSTRONG
Chifine st
PUTTING Tili: OLD CAN DO It INTO your adyi;rti.sin(; copy. Here' an ad clipped from an old issue of the Chico Tribune: stop ant iu:aj: J. H. BREED.
Having returned from cago with the largest and
stock of goods ever brought into Arizona, is prepared to give the people of Windsor and surrounding countrv THE DARNDEST BARGAINS ever heard of in this part of the country. I Carry A HELL OK A I ARGE STOCK OF GOODS which space will not allow to enumerate here, but If you will hitch up and call on th old man. you can bet your shirttail he will treat you right and sell you anything you may want in his line; and. if not too busy, "will rlav you a game of draughts." J. H. BREED,
PUN IN A HOSPITAL. (From The News-Times.) The police ambulance in charge of Officers DeVos and Parker was sent to the Epworth hospital where she received medical attention.
TO END GAMBLING .x CITY STREETS. .-v. a he, d. ire in The News-Times. That's perfectly right; we have always held to Die opmi'-n that gambling should r - done indoors somewhere.
If
JIM. DUST
(A.
U.LIXTRH
OFT Tili:
CH A IK. P. Dispatch).
Tuesday evening, Mr? Cnx will entertain the members of the democratic r.at.or.al committee and their wives at a dinner at the execution mansion here.
we a o sc.
CRUKLTY IN TFA'AS. (Dallas Ad Magazine. At next Wednesday evening's meeting of the study division You'll get the whole dope from E. W. Bateman, who handled the special advertising drives for Mrs. Tucker's Shortening in Dallas, Fort Worth and Waco.
Up to Michigan City Sunday, saw Warden Ed Keg irty of the s prison Ed i looking well and
he still reads The Tow r regularlv and that h wouldn't crre to kep up the battle of life further without it. So for Ed's sake we will continue to grope along on our cne cylinder until someone takes a hot at us and brings death to oir relief. Mr. Fogarty mentioned that it wo;1M now be possible to teach us cartooning or fome other light occuratior.. if we ever happened to draw a - to 21 years' sentence out of one of the local judge... Mr. Kogarty's personal interest in us is deeply appreciated.
All through the long hot summer.
i we ve missed i red Miggms ana his
swearing in rich, mellow undertones from in front of the .1. M. S. building. Sunday night, we saw Mr. Higgins lurking in the shadows at a picture show at Grand Beat h. Mich., which explains Mr. Higgins' strange disappearance.
A son of ex-Kaiser Fill has just recently blown out we believe the papers stated his brains.
AUTHORITIES DETKRM I N E D
PERSONAL I OR RAHY Miss Evelyn Armstrong guest of Frank, jr.. and Allen at Sheridan Beach.
BOOK. was the Ueorge Michigan
City. Ind., over the S.ibbith. A good time was had bv all.
More Truth Than Poetry By JAMES J. MONTAGUE
WHAT'S IN A NAME
l'nots .about our nainr: its liitir : its neinimg: wbonco it Mas dcriicd: its significance: jour l'i-K dav iml lucky jewel. P.Y MILDKUD MARSHALL.
Tin: old and Tin: nfav. No longer our dear little Johnny Is thrilled to his innocent core By those tales of the West in which Virtue Distressed Was wholly surrounded by gore. No more are his morals Imperilled By the chapter of hideous crime Where villains saw red and shot nice people dead Ir the novels that sold for a dime. l Forgot is the dreadful dime-novel We read when our dads were not by. Forgot are the tales of the wild western trails Where heroes looked Fcath In tho eye; A dime will not buy tne same fiction As it did in tho dear long ago, Hut you'll find the same crooks, and their crimes in the books That cost you two dollars a throw. No more does the oloodi-urdling ela ma
(Ten. twenty and thirty a seat) I
Rouse youth to a pitch of excitedness which Caused pulses to flutter and beat. No more does one Theodore Krtmer Put 17 crimes in one play, For the hard working hurd- who could never afford To go to the shows on Broadway. Ten, twenty .and thirty cent thtilkrs Are things of the long faded past; No longer the crowd shrieks its horror aloud As it looks at th.-se dramas
aghast. i If you're lookini: for dramatized! bloodshed.
With hideous nlrders repU-i", You only can go to ;i nice high- ! class show ! At a cost of fi e fish for a st .t! !
Ilo .Mourns .Mono. Ball players will have r.o sym
pathy for the umpire who was rob ' bed at the polo Grounds in New j York. They say it i poHje justice! that he was the victim ,,f a crook at I the very scene of so many of hisl own crimes.
Ho ßottor Bo Watrliotl. Bryan says his heart is in the
grave but politically he has several ! times had one foot there and he1
seems to have left his hat in the well known ring. (Copyright. 1 920.
JULIANA. One of the most in'f resting of etymological histories attaches to Juliana. The name was one of the earliest to be used in the Roman empire in the days of martyrdom when the Julian gens was at the height of its power. it first found fame through St. Julian, who was beheaded at Nicomedia under GaUrius. In the reign of Gregory the Great, her relics were supposed to be at Rome, but afterward were divided between Brussels and Sal'lon. Through the Klemi.-h duchessMathilda, she was specially honored in Normandy and her name was much used in royal circles. The illegitimate daughter of Henry I. whoso children he so cruelly maltreated in revenge for their father's rebellion, was called Julienne. England received the name as Julyan. It was borne there by the famous hunting prioress. Dame .Julyan Hemers. Britanny substituted an "s" for a "j" and produced the popjlar form Suliana. whe most famous exponent was the nun-sister (f Du Guesclin. who assisted his brave wife o disconcert the night attack of their late prisoner. Jade is Juliana's talismanic stone. The Chinese believe it to rejuoent the essence of the soul and il is s.ii 1 to bring its wearer happinr' and imperishable love. Wednesday is Juliana's lucky day and jive lit r lucky number. (Copyright. lt'Ji.i
The Horoscope
Tl KSDAY. JULY 20. Th" plan.-ts are most bmpitioijsly indited op this day. an-' should increase and promote all manner of enterprises and projoi ts. both in business and in the domestic, social and atfectional p-nhn-. 1'ndei thi tine stimulus al! undertakings should be essayed with courage and initiative-, with every assurance of siioe.-s-ful culmi: at ion. There is need of some degree of i a re in the signing of contra ts and writing-; of every nature, ko fun.u in mind possible danger of fraud, kery or misrep-re-senta tbn. Those in employment uro under a tit e augury for advancement of favors from their suj riors. The..'' who.-v birthday it is have the as-urar.ce of a fairly active and 5rosperous year, part bularly those m employnp-nt. Domestic affairs will al.-o thrive. A child born on this day will be popular, genbil. will succeed in tmployment and will rise in life.
High schools of the country will j be short 26.H00 teachers w hen the
x a il term commences, according to the Federal Bureau r;f Education. Washington.
uticura Soap
AND OINTMENT
Blue glass drives flies awav but
white, yellow or orange colored! glass attracts them, says an English scientist.
Ulear the Skin -i-.0!rtTT!t.TJ',eKJi.3.errre- rerrrr'M . Cit:cirkLirorMrttt.Lr;t.X.t:t.fa.liM.
mk- ' ' V,."J izJizusvjM sgncgnri'iu , :ir&crnrf-V-TIT" Tvr,TTjjr m w TMs4Wm fei eaa mmi i XJr;-C, i Sa - 17 späten to is sr. ?igTJSidt
Specials for Tuesday and Wednesday
2 Cans -flfh Pounds fgß 4 Cans Campbell's BW Sugar ... Pumpkin Pork & Beans ; 2c- 3 Packags 3 Pkgs. Tooth 7 A 50 Blueing . lOcPicks ... 10c i2JV 2 Cans 10ioaDVeIVel 790 2 Early June JW Sap " Sweet Peas 2 Packages 2 Boxes Shin- Corn 25a Corn- ola Shoe 5f ÜV starch .. 15cPolish .. 15c 3b
Store Closes Saturday Evening at 6 P. M.
w
E
MAii
3 J
-Come am! See U Store hours: Open 8:30 a. m. ; close 5:30 p. m.; except Saturday, close at 6:00 p. m.
If Now Including Smocks f tj
Smocks in copen, rose, peach, green lavender, yellow and leather shades. Both long and short sleeves, round and square neck and some have collars. Materials are Japanese Crepe, Wonderland and Trouville Cloth and Rene Linen. Embroidered in wool and silk, some have crochet trims. Regular price, $7.50 special, $5.00. Also smocks in Ginghams and Wonderland Cloth in rose, copen, peach, green and leather shades. Long and short sleeves, round and square necks also collars. Some have tie effects, some belted. Wool and silk embroidery in contrasting colors. Regular $5.00 value special $3.50.
Dusters, $5.00.
Former value, $6.75 to $10.75,
v f
t?;5
5 A:.'
mmPyA, I he Store
r
CLAUER'S
JcivelcrsSilvcrsmiths
Diamond Merchants A
Reliable
V
One word that expresses in a nut shell, the popularity of Clauer's bis jewelry store. For years and years, Clauer's have served the public und served it well. Never has this store broken faith with its customers. In buyins jewelry, deal with a dependable firm and avoid re-
V
r
1
Srets.
CLAUER'S
Exclusive But Not Expensive
Phones: Main 1444 Lincoln 144G
m iD)io).;r-
R. N. BEEBE 108 Colfax Ave. j Dry Cleaning, Rt: Cleaning j Dyeing, Pressing j
i- i
t - M Ii
"OLJ AMt HTLI '.HIE." IF YOU nee.1 Disney er 4 ar part!":'ar e to SKKVIClf!. f'-e uk Tl" la ere e-Hrerül j nrf In tl: the t"t jriice t l,errow. t i. rr.cr- certain toi :li ? cvo- o lie "-obi r-:'.a.e STATF.." Loan nn Ci.atte!. li.'j I7i
STATE LOAM CO.
! 1
i
Vi Si 2 i t'i j!
1
Leuth?. l :: " s. .M.eij -t.
9
I
1
Li
k
v u..
H. LEMONTREE
St!i Bend'a Ldiac Optoxort Hit ad lAnuf icturlrc OptlrUn T cn tjficat anj pair of gtais, no matter wtr tticy were made. JH 8. nCHIO.VN ST.
The Test of Time Has Proven That We
?7
' M AM M V If I mJ
if 9. htted tu ;:ir. i our r.urner..s r.e'db for
MONEY
Phorie Main 1618
i .i) von: iiiiv i.i..m.Mi AND I'KIMNG TO r i mi " 1 " 1 1 . i
1 WU'- - -r? .
S. M.MS SI. Tilid)one, I.infi.ln 017 1
SAM'L SPIRO & CO. 119-121 S. Michigan SL Home of H. S. &. M. Clothes
Tho ni niectrlo Kbcp S. D. Moran & Son Wiring and Repairing.
Glasses Properly Fitted
DR. J. BURKE, Op't. 230 s. II( IIKiA.V ST. Ilrkcn I tixi lupti .tei
