South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 52, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 21 February 1921 — Page 6
-MONDAY MOUNIXG. IXBRCUIY SI, 1821.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-ilMES Morning Evening Sunday ; J. M. ETZr HL-NSON. PutllaLfr. . JUUN HENRY ZUVER. TJlto-.
(
Member United Press and tho International News Service
ilv-rmr.jf Llition. Member Associated Press TJ AtJ&riitfd I'mi it xciu.lTkly r.tltleJ to the ose for rtpabHcation cf ill cpa V.iratce credit., to it or not tEr' wih crdltea la ttt ciorwi&i? eü.'tion ot this panr. nl aiM tL lecal ue MiL.lihfi L-la. TL! dff cot yplJ" Y arttixocn edition. All rlstts of repuL'.icatioa of specUl patci.e trt a ar rtrTeJ tj th tu!;lier as ta UCtJ tlua. rtn, Main ITWate traoO xefcarff. Otr tiBi of rroa er üe; rtuir.t waniel. After a r- m- u numbers lUln IIjG Lnii2.l df-rtu,ent: lUfcla 2101. ciiJ dltor; ilalu ;U0u. eodetj Ultor; "Mala UrculaUon ce-
EUBSCTUrTTON TtATnS: Momiaj and Dren! p!,,on,w Flc! l-'orr. 2c; HnaOar, lO Delivered by carTl?r In 0?;" Uad sn4 illsbswaki, 1 10. GO per jear la edtari'-e, or SOc .'v
JfcOird at tL üouti. Üti l icvr. aa aecoad das xnalL
KATLä liY MAIL. Zooee 1 Yr. C Moi. 3 M1. I M. 12 f-VOO 2 75 ji.r.j $ .2 A 4 C.tJ M W 1.75 ."0 6 & G IS) 2.75 2r) I ftV KlXJ 4.25 2 25 . Formica Rat. per raoQtn.
ADVERTISING HATES: Ak th adtPrt1?nfr dr-rtnint. rr!arn AlTeTtl!n Kepres ntatlres ; CON FT. Tlf'NTON & WOODMAN, INC.. 225 Fifth bt., Nfw York City. 72 W. Artatna kt Chrtrn- Afr'ron K1.tr ri-tr..' Vft r fir! E? . Kanetl
City, and Constitution LM?.." Atl-inta. ' TLe Nevrg-Tlttfe enMTon to kp ita dvrtipi'jsr col'i'nna frei from fraudulent rjianrfteatitlo!:. Aar Pro defrau1?1 througa atrocff of any adTrtia3ient In tLla rrer will confer favor Oil tt Eaaaageaieot Lj reporting t&e fact completely.
FEBRUARY 21. 1921
AIDS TO DAN CUPID. Another matrimonial bubble has bursted: another cf those agtnclc-s that furnish dupta for Delle Gua nesacs and Martha Ward?, Oscar Itosenflelda and Gustar Dinghanis, Inn been brought to book or ould be but for tho operators having Mown tho coop. "What will you have: blond or brunot " Thus the lovu broker Interrogates his prospective customer, lie has all varktks and all arc marvels of perfection with refined titles and all feeling tho ccemic urge that would lead them to the altar with, cut tho formalities of courtship. These mercenary aids to Cupid aro eald to reap rich harvests bringing lonesome folk together. They charfri all the traf!5; will bear and find It comparatively easy to cash in on the credulity of their clients. And their clients are not few. Literally hundreds of men are said to he picking their wives from mail order catalogs. The reason fcr thLi may be found In the spirit of adventure that Is etrong in man. Sally Brown, tho quiet little widow who lives acrcf.s the way. Is a mighty fine woman but he hn known Sally all hi life. So the would-be benedict, longing for a bit of adventure, decides to take the "comely widow of 33, refined and gentle; sparkling1 black eyes and loving disposition." He wants adventure. Usually ho gets It. And why shouldn't he? Thes-o fools, a new one born every minute; we sometimes wonder if It wouldn't bo more effective to punish them than tho people who defraud them. They are of much the tame stripe a.s the purchasers of "blue sky" dono up in neat prize packages, labeled as oil stocks. They fall for this nonsense and then expect pity. It almost gets a sane man's "goat" to know that there are eo many bungalo-headed people with no upper-story.
THE STATE OF LINCOLN. perhaps no moro congressmen, but two more senaters, and you have the net curse to tho country of another state in the Union; a new state Lincoln proposed for the U. S. map. A petition for disunion, creating such a subdivision, is now pending before the Idaho legislature. Northern Idaho has aeked tho legislature of that etato to memorialize congress in behalf of a new state, which Is to include the Idaho panhandle, and possibly tho western portion of Washington. The petitioners want the new state to be named Lincoln. Spokann and Lewistoa aro suggested as possible locations for the capital. Just recently the Pocatello chamber of commerce gave ltrf approval to the new state movement. This Is the Hrjt time it has met with favor in southern Idaho. The northern part of Idaho la closely connected with Spokane, more closely, In fact, than Spokane and eastern Washington aro in touch with th western part cf that state. Other reasons that miht be given aro perhaps that the eeceding section of Idaho wants to escapo In this way. further representation in tho U. S. penßte by Sen. William E. Borah, and attach themdivert to the bailiwick of Sen. Miles Pcindexter experience the experiment of Jumping out of the fry-lnp-pan into the fire. Anyhow, if there is to be a new ftate, no better name could be given It than Lincoln; that is, unle the new congress, considerate of Berlin in its conduct as It was in its election, wishes to name It Wilhelm I
IDEAS THAT ROAM. Have you ever noticed it as you read, or hear others, talk, that you arc merely listening to yourfelf, or reading your own thoughts; that It is your, eelf publicly txpressed? How many times have you faced the fact that rome one else has made ue of "your" idea; or, in ether words, how many times has tho other fellow 'beat you to it?" If you are an advertising man it is probable that ou have found In the newspapers an idea fully wcrked c-u: which you had been turning over in your mir.d. If you are a merchant or a manufacturer it la more than likely that you have suddenly dicovere 1 that some cne has already put into operation a merchandizing idea which you had evolved and meant to ose soon. If you are a novelist, an es.tiyjst, a painter, a ccm peser, cr a scu'.ptcr it is probab!e that some tim? in your career you have been chagrined to discover that some or.e else haa had an idea which you thought wr.a ycur exclusive property and has got that idea before the jub'.ic while you were tili thinking about it. Th? history of human thought Is full of instances where two or more men were working on the eame idea and where tht or. who reaped tho rewards Wi3 the or.a who brought his idea first before the public. The patent ofT.ce and the International copyright, especially the former, are In existence becaus.j lde.3 are net exclusive properties occurring to only cue man. Two, five, a dczen men unknown to each ether .nd eparate 1 by thousands of miles may ba working on th eume new Idea. The succe-rful man la the man who firct translates Ms thought Into actio:.. He la the man who when an idea comes to him pp:s himself Immediately to thrj task cf realizing his ida as something other than a mental fancy. An idea which is not in action, which is not materialized, is nothing more than a mental toy. It is usefui. worth1, and profitable only when I U a iible fact. Take a lessen from the rlltcrial writer, if we may y hf: permittedto mention it, a a sample. lie utilizes fc!s t-ytry id:a every Jay. llu has to order to keip
going; that !, if they may be e&Jled ideas and then he probably discovers about press time that his contemporary editor has been hammering at the am nalL People occasionally accuse them of setting together, but they don't. But epeaking of idea, "whether they are Ideas; those mental aberration that Infest the editorial brain I They must be. Otherwise there wouldn't b no many geniuses of the street, and the club, eta. appropriating them and propounding them as their originaLlit'e!'.
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PROTECTION. The recent attempt of Rep. Eph Iailey of Ft. Wayne well-krrown here, to effect the emasculation of the Indiana workmen's compensation act, had a wicked aspect to it aside from the direct financial considerations. Look at the thing from a physiological standpoint and from the standpoint of service. When In fear, or in anger, physiologists tell us, the adrenal glands secrete Into the blood a chemical known as adrenalin which gives us added energy. That Is why man, when he Is in a desperate situation, "his back to the wall," ehows a euperhuman Btrcngth. But In cases of chronic fear or anger this abnormal secretion of adrenalin produces fatigncv. The energy-producing eubstanco Is not worked off. It becomes a deadener of energy. The employe who is in constant fear of accident cr ill-health or of being thrown out of employment, which would reduce him and his family to want, ia easily tired out. He cannot produce as much as he could if hLä mind were relieved of these fears and worries. Therefore a guarantee against these fears 13 an economic asset to the employer. The workman's compensation act relieves in one direction the fear of accident. Tho maintenance by large organizations of nurses and physicians relieves in another direction the fear of disability. Group Insurance 13 another guarantee. It is all merely by the way; mentioned In passing. Hep. Dalley failed, and failed very suddenly in his attempt on tho compen?ation act. It is enough to mention it Just to show that there are aspect to a thing sometimes, hidden below a surface which mere legislators are; well, not expected to have the vision to seo through.
ANOTHER "DAY" COMING. We have days, and days, and days almost as numerous in peace as they were In war, when wo had our "meatiest days," and "whcat!e6a days," and "gasless Sundays. That is enough. We aro trying to forget them. N'ow in addition to "flro prevention days, and "Arbor days," and a lot of other 'days," the United States bureau of fisheries moves that you observe "Fish day," which is March 9. AU fish dealers second the motion. It is to be a national affair thi3 year, though, hereafter it 1 to have an international flavor, by Joining hands with Canada. Tho Dominion already has a Fish Day, the first day cf Lent. Next year the United States will pick that day, and fish will be the, centerpiece of every dinner from Itio Grande to Hudson's bay. For this is a fish-eating affair. Thoso who enjoy baiting the hook had Jumped at the conclusion that it was to be a day wherein everybody throws off all cares of life and devotes himself to rod and line. Fish day is not like that! On Fish day (as they have planned it) you stick to your regular Job end cat fish morning, noon and evening. That's all there's to it. It's not a national fishing day; it's Just a fish day. Come now, don't be a bullhead and kick out. o Many solutions of the housing problem have-been euggected but none better than the one to build come houses.
Thirty angry marines destroyed a newspaper plant in Nicaragua. A make-up man must havo shown them some type llco. o Lloyd George and Asqulth are a couple of baffling names for the poet laureate of England to hunt rhymes for.
Between now and March 15 ono can appreciate the comfort of a $2,000 income.
Essa Hablb, New York peddler, was arrested' 80 limes a year. It's almost a habit with Habib.
Swearins at congressmen Is no nevr diversion but Dawes did it right in front of them.
Other Editors Than Ours
THE PIIDLVU1 FIGHT. (Indianapolis News.) It would be a great mistake for the people of Indiana to think that the fight of the bosses on the jrimary law has been abandoned. For that is far from being the case. It is even eald that the plan still is to take nominations of candidates for the senatorshlp and governorship out from under the law. If this can not be done, the presidential preference primary will be abolished. If the "organization" has Its way. This is indeed the feature of the law that is mcst objectionable to "the tired men" of Harry Daughcrty who wish rtill to nominato presidential candidates in "hotel bedrooms." But even if this feature of the law Is retained, there is still the char.ee of continuing boss-controlled methods of picking delegate to the conventions, men who will, fcs they did last year, disregard th- will of tho people as expressed at the preference primary. And thus it would still be true that "public sentiment does not count when the organization gets buy." The people should continue to express their preference for presidential candidates, and they ehould also be clothed with the power to choose delegates, so that they may be sure that their will as extressed at the preference primary will be loyally carried out. A great deal is now being said about the expense of the primary. Of courte, it is expensive but bo is an election, and yet no one Is proposing that the bosses do our electing. It ia very conveniently forgotten that the convention system Is also expensive, often exorbitantly so. Men who aspire to the governorship or senatorship do not get delegates for nothing and we are referring only to honest and legitimate expenses. The business cf getting delegates is not without cost. All this talk Is mere cover for an attack on a law which Is distasteful to men who can not get over the feeling that they are divinely coramissiontd to manage the people's polities and to chocs their candidates. The real question Is whether we shall have a system under which "public sentiment trill count no matter how "Luay" the organization ts. "I never cou:d believe," said an Englishman more than 200 years ago, "that Providence had sent a few men into the world, ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions already bridled and saddled to be ridden." The fight is at bottom one for power, and the question Is whether power should be lodged in the people or the politicians. It has also been said that "the r-eople never give up their liberties but under some delusion.' There should be no delusion in this case, for the isue Is clear, and sharply drawn. It Is for the legislature to say whether nominations ehall be made by the people or by "tired ron" at t o'clock in the morning in hotel bedroom.
The Tower of Babel
By BILL ARMSTRONG.
BRIEF NEWS OF THE CITV. The rapidly growing organization, Corn Mash-in-the-Tummy, will hold an unusually Important meeting Tuesday night. Delegations are expected from MIshawaka. Elkhart, Goehen, Wakarusa and other important points.
Tom Brandon, of South Bend and New York, has returned.
NOBODY COULD WRITE ANYTHING AS DROLL AS THIS BUT ART 3LC DONALD. The outside edge of the outside wheels hit the inside edge of the outside rails and the subway cargo shifted. Everybody seemed to step on somebody ele. I hate to be conspicuous. So I stepped on the inside instep of the shellrimmed spectacle-bearing person whose projected perimeter was adjacent, not to say tangent, to my alternate exterior angles. I tramped on his foot, if you get what I mean. "Pardon me," I explained, in case he hadn't noticed it. "'S all right!" he acknowledged. "I walk on that foot myself." And for all I know It may be so. I couldn't dispute tho allegation. Nor could I resist a glance at the allegator. He was gazing in awe at the string of advertising cards posted Just abeam of tho hanging handles. "Wonderful three - color Job, Isn't it?" he inquired. "Marvelous!" I conceded. "Which ono?" "That SNEEZIZZLE one. Compelling, don't you think?" "Indubitably! But whom would it compel to what?" "Peoplo to run to their druggists and buy bottles of Sneezlzzle, of course." "Why?" "Read the wonderful copy, my dear man! See. right below the beautiful lithograph of tho package it says: " 'Savo Your Syrtem From the Sneeze." "Delving back into the fiction of famous failures you will find that each and every calamity hinged upon a sneeze. When the whale had Jonah down and all but got away with him he failed! Why? A sneeze caught him unprepared! Why did tho Head Lion fall down when he got a good chance at Daniel? He snoze! Look at Napoleon, Darius Green, Willie. Hohenzollern, Halgon Haig, and Dr. Demberg. Statistics reveal the secrets of their colossal
croppers: For they all sneezed!
You probably could cot fall as famously as they. Yet you owe It to yourself to guard agxinst even partial failure. SNEEZIZZLlJ positively prevents sneezing b causing a cough. Buy a bottle today!' M "Yeah," Z remarked intelligently. "I think such advertising is real literature. Don't you?" My etepee was etlll enthusiastic. "Um!" I committed. "Great piece of copy, isn't it?: I nodded and considered the Interview closed. But the person with the foot he sometimes walked on himself looked eagerly into my face for further comment. Plainly, I was expected to cay something more about that card. "Wonder who wrote it?" I perplexed, politely. I ah ah er (Here he prefsed a manicured forefinger against a Up that should have been manicured) "I did!" And then he sneezed. C. L. F.
John Henry Zuver claims that the j reason that his Ford sedan squeaks terribly ia becau-se the axles of his car were made by Riley Hinkle out of pig iron.
OUR DAILY POME, I'm glad the sky is painted blue And the earth Is painted green, With such a lot of nice fresh air. All sandwiched in between.
"Your success or failure In life is
bounded on the North by the' top of I your head, on the East and West by j your ears, and on the South by the ! back of your neck." j
Said Edison, aged seventy-four, ! "I've really lived a lifetime more, Because since youth I've had the gift ! Of toiling on a double shift. j
I've missed a lot of fetes, I fear; I ehould have birthdays twice a year."
They met on the Bridge at Midnight. They never will Meet again. One was an EastBound heifer, The other a West-bound train.
DAILY POME NO. 2. Judge Landis made an angry yelp On how the bankers pay their help; Whereat a senator named Dial Demanded an Impeachment trial; The senator's a banker, yesThat's why he's mad! How did you guess?
Ignorant Essays BY J. P. McEVOY
BABIES. Babies are tho young of the socalled human race. They are born without any senso and most of them never outgrow it. Hence, they are said to resemble their parents. They are not fully equipped when they arrive, in which they resemble Fords. They also resemblo Fords In other ways; nearly everybody g:;s one sooner or later; you can can hear them a long way off; they require plenty of oil, water, and air. and they usually havo a rattle. Babies havo no teeth at first which is one of the wise provisions of sapient nature. Otherwise, they would bite the fool relatives and friends who Insist upon kissing them. I wouldn't blame them, either. Baby girls 4?o not like to be kissed but they outgrow this later, They are not allowed to choose their parents which Is rank Injustice. But parents haven't any choice in the matter, either, so that makes it fifty-fifty. Babies have no eye-brows and Btxan&ely enough do not aeem to miss them. Usually they are shy on hair. too. which cuts down the cost Of their upkeep, since their parents do not need to have tho boy babies shaved every other day. Ain't Nature grand! One of the drawbacks to having babies is the naming of them. Even baby must have a name, you know, so that when It grows up bills can be sent to it. Otherwise the bills would be delivered to the wrong persons or would never ar
rive and that would bo distressing. Very. But naming a baby i very easy after all, for several reasons. In the first place, no matter what
nam is finally chosen, the baby j can be backed into it and he can't
ooject, secondly, tnero are eo many more namea to choose from these days than when our forefathers battled with tho job. Look at all tho Pullman Car namse we have which they never even suspected. And the Apartment Hcuso names. And such cute little trade namea as Troco, Nabisco, Cutlcura, Aspirin, and Bevo. Tako young Baby Bo?gs, for instance. What could be moro darl
ing than Bevo Bcggs? Or little girl baby Cobbles. Miss Cutlcura Cobbles. I call that trea label, I j
do. And so forth, you can seo the :
possibilities, can you not? Fathers and mothers aro the first to suspect their babies of intelligence, but parents, aro naturally suspicious.
But !n closing, there Is this to I
be paiiJibout babies: with all their faults wo love them still. The stiller tho better. (Copyright. 1921.)
GEORGE WASHINGTON. As the spirit of Washington views tho situation. (To'morrow's Ignorant Essay.) Don't Miss It!
More Truth Than Poetry By JAMES J. MONTAGUE
Tho Martyrs. With private and personal business Our statesmen are always engrossed; They don't give a cuss for the pomp and the fuss . That go with a cabinet post. They haven't the money; they haven't the time, . They cry. with a heart breaking sob. And then, with a sacrifice, high and yjbllme, They galantly go on tho job. Take Jones, who receives as a lawyer Ten thousand or so for a case; Just look what he'd lose iberry Rales. To serve in a cabinet place! Against all such honors by and by; And sternly refuses to swerve. But take it from us, and get down a good bet. That Joncs if he's asked tc will serve.
And
his friends
Brown though
have Insisted
That no one can possibly be 8o thorouphly fit in an arm-chair to lit And help Mr. Harding as he. Declares that ho cannot afford to accept In fact he declines In advance And yet for a fortnight he hardly has slept For fear that he'll not get the chance. In praise of American statesmen Ther a!-toys Is this to be said. They don'vVaat 10 shine la thft
statesmancraft line; They'd rather live private instead. But while they will tell all the world how they hate To loll in a cabinet chair, Though the cost be as great as they frequently state When the call comes along, they are there.
JUST FOLKS By EDGAR A. GUEST
THE VOW. I used to think it mattered, used to think I had to be Forever at the business of acquiring wealth for me; Then I gavo myself to labor and I
bent my back to toll, j And to make myself tho richer oft I burned the midnight oil, j Till one day a little fellow seemed to I
look me through and through And he asked If making money was the only thing men do. It was Just a youngster's question, but It struck me like a blow, lie had heard me talk my- business and he'd seen mo come and go, He had watched me night and morning, either happy cr dismayed, Elated or disgruntled by Investments I bad made. And he'd come to the conclusion, I could tee beyond a doubt. That money was the only thing his daddy thought about I know I choked a little as I took him on my knee And I turned away a moment eo a tear he wouldn't see; Then I hugged him somewhat tighter than it was my want to do. And I told him, "More important than all else on earth are you. Theco'a a bigger thing than money tad there Is & talfir joy;
2a IS? lfYM
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And lt'sw rapped up in the future of a certain Hille boy." I couldn't quite explain it for he couldn't understand, But I kneu- he caught the prewura of hi.i daddy's rugged hand, And I know we both grew closer as as 1 held him on my kr.te And tried to draw a picture of the m.n I hoped he'd be. Dut what's more, I'd learned a lesson one that caused my eyes to swim. And I vc wed to God that evening that I'd jpend xcorj time with
Union Trust Company
6f rtepodt Boxe with rpedai fxcilltlsJ for tht yrrrcxy cf customer.
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