South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 119, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 29 April 1921 — Page 6

I'UIPAY MOUMNd, A PHIL 20, 132!.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday j. M. FTnnin.NsoN. iM.Mir.r. . John ih:nhy zcver. editor.

Member United Press and the International News Service Mornl.-.j; I..l!tlon. Member Associated Press TTi .A p tM I'ffM ! r. :,;,;vr!T rnt!'ld to tb fT rrntI!r?'nn -f 11 rw lip3t-v r'rritrrl to It or n't Mr-'r-ri wl'.tM la th rr.rir? !iti-.n f f this Wr "a,, tb f-l r. pub;!hf-l hnMn Thl 1' s not rU'WT to tn ftornr.f.n -.l!tl"n. All rieht of nr'::!'':"lnn of 11 pt:rl.f& fcertia are nrvci ly C.e j.uMisUra as to tola c-ai-t i j r. s. Thnn. Main 51M. rrht f.rnnrh trhnnr. r'lv "TlC S:r-f r'rn ''T artrrT.t nantl Affr P. m. r.lZ-U Bnn.rr - Mi!n 2100. rla -1 fp.J lrp;irtmnt : Mi!n 2101, rltjr '!!tr; Mila 21rM. iociety .'.itrr; Main -Krj, circulation Oe-rartrr.fr.?.

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ii.'vi-,'ri'nnunn. Any perjin fKirnndPii inroujru jum :!.' of ny nlrrt1)if mnt In tYAn psr will mr.fcr a favor a It! Hfinatrfrr.pr.t by rrorrlr t.f fiat rf):nrltly. APRIL 29. 1921

WAGES AND COST OF LIVING. "Th admir.i?tratIon 1o- not f-xp-ct labor to do U all. TIktp muHt t furthrr rluction In tho (ot of living thnt will rnnblft tho worklr.?man to nccr j.t a reduced wage." This par.iErrarth, quotrJ from Washington goes to tho vry h'art of th; b!s problem now prcsflrio for Folutlon. That problem is to find a new level -vh r af.- and cf of living can meet with rca-i'-nablo equity to all concerned. That the administration rraiizs that there 1? far too great a discrepancy between the production and retail FaJes ro.t3 of those thiriKs which the workingman mu buy. is a pood sign. We. uspert that Mr. Hoover la largely responsible for thU administration joint of view. It Is pror-ahly unfair to the retailer to charge all of this discrepancy to him. He represents but a part of the machinery of distribution. Between him and tho original manufacturer are brokers, Jobbers, whole- ?. rrs and whatnot, all performing more or le?3 artful function, the eot and profit of which ara Anally tran.lateu into terms of price to the reailer. On top of thL, the- retailer ! entitled to a fair profit. Wliat tho worklnjrman, or any other consumer, i Interested in 13 what he pays to the re'alW. This lr the figure that must be taken Into iccount when co.t of living, In Ü3 relation to tago?, la bejner eonfidered. Tliero L no doubt that much of the recent talk '.bout reduced cost of living Is based upon deTeased pru-es received by the manufacturer and farmer. S'ome of this great decrease has been rejected in retail prlcc3, but not enough to stimulate buying to the extent that It must be stimulated Wore there can be a return of real prosperity.

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PLUCKED EYE-BROWS. Hack in lSo the elder D'Israell wrote: "In China the girld are continually plucking their eyerov that they may be thin and loner." lie spoko of thi. custom among the Chinese in .n csay on feminine fashions jrevaillng in bei;shted countries like China, Turkey and Africa. He cited it as an example of the lengths to which vomen in those land.-? will go in order to conform .o their peculiar notions of beauty. Ho described the Chinese custom of plucking yf brows In connection with similar custom.'? elsechore. such a--; the practice of the women of Greenland who color their faces blue and yellow; and the fashion of painting the face red, anions r.atlve women of Intlia; and the custom in ancient Persia of breaking the r.oe in order to give it the aquiline contour. "Think goodness." th. ladies of D'lfrael's time doubtlessly exclaimed, "fashion Joes no'; condemn i:r. to Mich atrocities," And he would have bcn regarded asa crazy proplut who would have predicted that 100. year liter, women in America and Kurope would bo having their eyebrows plucked in order to prolU' c thin and long effect so popular in China.

EATING SAWDUST. The Wisconsin I'olb-ge of Agriculture has revived the old coiri,- story about the farmer who feil bis cow javdut the one who said. "Just as I get her used to it she di d!" Iut now the fxpt iinur.r h is another end. Chemists have succeeded in turning pir.e sawdust into ood cow feed. Tho sawdust L- cooked under pressute with dilute acid. Thin turns rt of the kuvdut to sugar and makts the rest powdery and dil'f : ib'.e. It c.tT'.'t l-e f d e lusiv. ty. It lacks protein, but ro one fed der is fed cxv islvi ly. The cows grew fat or. sawdust sup; -b. raer.t. d with other feed at the Wis.'on.-in college. The P".--ibiiities of sawdust as tcod haven't bo n -hiusr d. Itut, few will find joy In the Thought of rhemis- turning another popular ;oke into jIain fact. Th it is the joke about breakf.i't fovd leir.g nude of sawdust.

THE DOUBLE MOTIVE BEHIND THE "PRO-PRIMARY" MANDAMUS CASE. Institution of a mandamus suit to force the holding of the city primary, dtfpite tho provisions oZ the commision-mir.aser enabling act suspending that jrimary incidr.t to the proceedings there-ur.d'-r. while claimed to be a friendly act, appears rather to be a bit cf political strategy, maneuvering frr TTsltior. as between two opposing forces, antagonistic to each otb.--r. ut both anxious t3

hav'

o co m m issio n ma r. a ge r election sidetracked.

Uoth the rarsn ar.d the S.M-t irt fictions of th3 n p-:b!.can party with th "O:!;c,--Soeking Mutual Admirationiti of Bourbon Democracy" p.andwihed in betwetn tliem, seem contending, upon fid vi.-. of the ueual prist of "unconstitutional" lawyers, that the enabling law is invalid and all proceedings thereunder faulty. The right in the courts Is really or. for advantage ns between the factions in cr.no their "wish" tb "father of the thought." can be realized upon. regard'.: of hooks or crooks. Itr member! First cf all the purpose is to w ard ff adoption of the commission-manager system; that much in the interests of the politicians, ohVe fekera, and their henchmen generally. Secondly. h ßcblrt aggregation Is auspicious of the Carson taction knowing that it has its .arm up 1-s fleeve. and pretends to be bringing its mandamus suit to prvent iho latter from bringing an injunction rrocee-dir.g later, an 1 p- rh aps winning out on it titer & manner that will leave the former without much ttaoding. The idea Is unique. The Seebirt crowdL convinced, we participate ly virtue of its

political wish, that everything lgal Is illegal In connection with the comml.vlon-manager system belr.ff unabl to find anything else wrong with It.and knowing that the Carson aggregation Is similarly convinced, anticipates that there Is a trick in the lack of Carson resistance, for the playing cf which a trap has been set. Get the Seebirt angle, or, if not th Seebirt angle, t leaat the angle of his most trusted llcutenantsMr. Seebirt himself, we understand, and his lieutenants as well, want it understood that he advised against the Institution of the mandamus uit. but be that as It may It comes from his camp; the camp of the republican candidates much aligned with him, and of the republican city committee, using the same gentleman as a "stoolpigeon," or nominal plaintiff, cs was employed by tho Seebirt faction in pushing through Its election of a city chairman. He so indelicately held the reins In putting that over that the Seebirt organ admitted itself at the time to have been cut of sympathy with It. And now tho excuse. Suppose, they say, the law Is unconstitutional or the proceedings under it so Irregular that they can be set aside. If s.o. it is maintained, the same would continue even after the commission has taken office. They see anticipations of this in Clerk Bilinskl's report which they Insinuate may have been framed from Carson headquarters, and In what they fear as a linguistic substitute for hope, is the improper method of calling the election by the oouncll. Next they claim to have a hunch from somewhere that it is the plan of the Carson rchemers to let the referendum election go on, having the primary postponed, even though illegal, and then attack it after the election, if it carrie.s by restraining election of commissioners, cr their taking ofllce after elected. In the one case there would be no election next fall, were the suit successful, or in the other the result would be the same, with reference to taking ofiice, and Mayor Carson, and all present city officials would hold over for another four years or until their succe3sor could be duly elected and qualified. And. well, to be frank about it, after our experience in watching its handing of tho ZimmerDambachcr liquor cases, reporting to all sorta of legal entanglements to thwart the law, one might riot be surprised to see such a course pursued If legalists behind the Carson administration had the faintest hope of succeeding with it. Therefore one might say that if there must be a lot of litigation over this thing to satisfy the "unconstitutional" lawyers and the commission-manager plan's political antagonists, it might as well come now as ever, and perhaps better. The "unconstitutional" lawyers wo have ever with us, and everything is wrong with them, you know, though but once In 87 times, according to legal statistics, they turn out to be righc. it was they who contested the constitutionality of Iho Webb-Kcnyon law, the Indiana prohibition ac. the ISth and 19th amendments and the Volsteal code, and so we might go on Indefinitely not these same local "unconstitutional" lawyers, but lawyers of th same "negative" minds trained In the same echool. Hut that Is secondary. We wonder if It wer-3 certain that the Carson crowd had no such Idea, it would make any considerable difference to th3 Seebirt adherents. Aye, there's the rub! Our gues ?s that at least quite as much as the suit is one friendly to the commission-manager cause, it i calculated to serve to wean all supporters of thnt cause away from Carson, by fixing a suspicion o him firmly upon their minds, to be used against him in case the suit does fail, and the referendum in lost. Clever politics! The Seebirt lieutenants will overthrow the city manager law and referendum proceedings if they can. and if they can't, they have laid their wires to let Carson take the blame for their trying it, tho blame consisting of a fictional possibility that Iiis opponents are dangling before the public eye as a reason for their action. We congratulate the strategist whose imagination conceived the bright idea tr. say tho least; that is congratulate him upon his imagination, If it was Imagination, which maybe It was and maybe it wasn't. Carson is the "goat" whichever way it works. Aside from which, of course, the case must b left to the courts. This comment has only to do with the politics of it politics, which as we have repeatedly said since tho movement started, at iU eery turn in its attitude toward that movement, ii proving the desirability of getting it out of our municipal governmental system; a veritable tyranny, the elimination of which is one of tho purposes for which the commission-manager platt was conceived. o Architects say" that the world's most beautiful bank building is in Owatonna, Minn. This must make New York drummers foam at the mouth. o Speaking of mathematics, do you realize how many make a million? Very few. o Do you remember when you used to see $5 gold pieces in circulation? o -

Other Editors Than Ours

INTRODUCING YOURSELF. (IJy Dr. William W ISarton.) There is a person whom I should like to have ou meet, and whom I desire the pleasuro of introducing to you. That person is yourself. Tlease take a good look at yourself in the glatw, and maku your best bow. Socrates asked you to be acquainted with this person, and so did Iope, and so did many other distinguished people. I regret that you do not knov yourself as well as you ought. There are many mei of whom W. E. Eagan might have written: "He read the books which all the wise men writ; lie searched the world for knowledge, not for pelf; lie thought no man unknown, so keen his wit. Hut once he mt a stranger 'twas himself." This stranger to whom I introduce you is well worth your knowing. You know him but superficially. Much that is beet In him you do not know. Yoj r.re familiar with the commonplace details of hia life, but you do not sufficiently recognize his aspirations, his worthier purposes, his real and true nature. I once said to a stern man: "I expect to live longer than ycu, and to conduct your funeral service. I am going to tell people that ;ou are a fraud." He started to be angry, then stopped, for he felt sure that I had not meant It unkindly. I went on: "You have bluffed your way through life, concealing all that is best in you. and everywhere' putting your worst foot foremost. You have tried to act as If you were hard-hearted, and have acted as if you were ashamed of all that you have most reason to be proud of. I know that you havo a very tender heart." His eyes tilled with tears, and he said "Boy, boy! How did you find that out?" I only wish he had found it out eariler. I wi?h all men would discover their own best selves. They live such crabbtd, narrow, mean and fretful lives, strangling th-ir better selves. Stand up and make a bow to your best self, and tit over and make more room for him. He dJ-f-erves It. .

The Tower of Babel

. BV BILL ARMSTRONI

About the only exciting thinc that's happened around town in tht pat 2 4 hours that we know of is Dave Fishgrund stopping his machine in front of Garland's to se ; how Tom's anniversary sale was going, and claiming that he was forced to stop there because he had run cut of pas. ,

i:i:it:iiiu;i to dog nti-rvint-muth. (Wash. School Hatchet.) In England they have parks that it takes six weeks to go through Ha, that's nothing-, we've got alleys In South Bend that the health officers never go through. ELEANOR WITUCKA.

An east side man stabbed his wife three or four times the other day during a family quarrel. The newspaper stated that the wife was very much Furprised over the attack. It's funny how a little thing like that would occasion a woman to any more than lift an eyebrow.

George riatner, the venerable tobacco dealer, reports that he has had to put on another clerk to take care of the business he got out of John Zuver's editor!, ii the other day.

cror out. regardless, of who is th-s perpetrator of the same. IF YOl HAD 11 MOIU1 KIDS. YOU MIGHT GO INTO VAUDEVILLE AND PLAY "IIEIN7S r7 1'ICKLl." South Bend, Ind., April 27th, 1921. Tower of Babel, City. Dear Bill: I am looking for some good business to put my children in. as soon as they grow up. What would you suggest? Say It With Flowers. ADAM BEEHLER.

Be sure you are right, then go ahead, even If tho neighbors are watching you from behind tho curtains.

Some people are so two-faced they ought to enjoy riding on a train as thfty can look out of botn windows at once.

Fred Loughman scz he's always afraid of an undertaker chair because he hasn't did any gymnasium work in years.

Some of these days the reformers are going to propose that Wayne Wheeler be made fun censor of the United States.

They say the a ays are longer at Zion City. 111., but maybe they just seem longer.

At the ICiwanis luncheon the other day. Rev. A. M. Eells was telling hla companion that he got the habit of exchanging cigars with other traveling men when he was on the road years aero. Hew to the line, let the quips fall where they may. Our policy Is to expose sin wherever It

C030'EXSATIOY. The Devil sends the blessed wind That blow the knee-skirts high But God is just and sends tho dust To blind the wicked eye.

A prospect was seen to run and Jump In a manhole yesterday p. m. downtown, when he observed A. S. Burkart bearing down on him for a fast canvass.

Frank Thorpe, who has been with the Goodrich Rubber company ever since Doc Goodrich quit the spragettl business and started making auto tires, is abroad in a new- Essex roadster. The car was purchased on the confidential credit plan.

Ignorant Essays By J. P. McEVOY

It is custoi.-.nry for people who would say it with 'bricks, while you are alive to say it with flowers after you have been tipped over. And doubtless they mean well enough, but too often tho spirit is willing whilo the meter is weak. I embalmed (oh, happy word) this idea once in faultless verse which purled along somewhat in this fashion: Just inside the outside portal. Called (by some) the Golden Gate, Stood the spirit of a mortal Who had jtist arrived of late, And he voiced a ghoulish chortle That was cluttered up with hate: "I am waiting for a geezer," Were the words he said to me; "I shall land upon his beezer Very hard and fluently, For the In Memoriam wheeze, or Rather verse, he wrote, 1. e.: " 'In Loving Memory of my Friend, Alexander UluhMts. He has died and went to heaven, His friends, in their sorrow, weep; Why did you leave us. Alexander? When do you suppose we will ever meet? You are gone but not forgotten, In my memory you remain; Every time I think of you It gives me a pain.'" I was about to say that the above was a typical eulogy, -but that isn't so. Jt is much broader in spirit and deeper in meaning than the average eulogy. Which is one of the reasons whv we all hate to die: wo know that

the question, "O Grave, where is thy Victory; Oh Death, where Is thy Sting." is not entirely rhetorical. The Sting is the bum eulogy which some friend will write for us.

Now I propose to rob Death of !

one of its terrors. Instead of looking forward with dread to eulogies, let us Inaugurate the policy of having mylogies. In other words, prepare your own eulogies in advance; write them with care or have an expert write them; polish them off neatly and then file them away with your best pose, where the window can find them easily when the reporters come around. In short, everyone should read proof on hi3 own eulogy and epitaph. Who could improve on Piron's sarcastic epitaph, which he wrote himself: (We translate roughly): "Here lies Firon, who was nothing, Not even a Member of the Academy." And Stevenson's exquisite: Under tho wide and starry sky Dig my grave and let me lie, Glad did I live and gladly die And I lay me down with a will; These be the words you grave for me. And the hunter home from the hill. Here he lies where he longed to be; Home is the sailor, home from the sea, To sum: A eulogy is what other people write for you, a mylogy is what you write for yourself. Eventually, whv not now? Roll your own.

More Truth Than Poetry By JAMES J. MONTAGUE

A MISTAKE SOMTAYH17RE. Faint the inside of the hous- blue and you will get rid of the flies. The New York Daily News.

"The fly." the paper said. "Is pleased by any hue Or tone of pink or red, But hates the shade of blue. If blue is on the wall. The microbe bearing fly Will not do well at all; In fact he'll shortly die." And sx the brush we plied. Till walls and floors as well And everything inside The house wherein we dwell, The staircase and the hall, The collar, arraway. And garbage cans, were all As blue as Baffin's Bay. "Ab!" we grimly said. With triumph on our face, Th flies will soon be dead That enter in this place. No more they'll frighten us With their ill-favored sneer; Their deadly bacillus Will swiftly wither here." The weather now is warm. The house is overflowed With flies that flock and s.varm All over our abode. In postures pertly quaint

The.y stand around and

They lighted on our raint And simply ate it off. (Copyright, 1321.)

JUST FOLKS By EDGAR A. GUEST

PEANUT SIIIXjLS. Some may ride in limousines and some in fine sedans, But let me have the common car which is the happy man's. The car which once was new and fine, but now is new no more, The good old car with peanut shells forever on the floor.

( I do not hunger for a rig which costs

so very much, I want no polished body which the children must not touch; I like to see the sticky prints emblazoned on the door. And see the last ride's peanut shells still strewn upon the floor. Oh, let me have tho popcorn car, with candy papers, too. And I'll not envy him at all whose bus is ever new; Though I would be a tidy man, somehow when day is e'er It's good to put the car away with shells upon tho floor. It's good to have a battered car to drive along the street, A car which shows to every eye the marks of little feet; It's good to have a happy car, with gladness running o'er, Ar.d there's no richer sign of joy than shells upon the floor. (Copyright, 1321.)

scoff.

But It IIan't. We have ken watching the papers to see if the reduction by the United States Steel Corporation was going to make safety razor blades cost lesj than radium.

NOTICU Modern Woodmen and Royal Neighbors. Family night Friday evening at hall of Colfax Camp. S562-23.

Significant. The pcit office clerks are wondering If they are poir.? to benefit by th. coincidence that Hays rhymes with "raise"

F RE

SIks Got It. Now. Anyway, we ought to make Greece come across with what she owes us.

ATTENTION FAItMITKS! The most important meeting of milk producers ever held in St. Joseph county will be held in the su-

j perior court room at the court hou??

Saturday üfternoon. Ai-Til HO. at 2 o'clock. This means you. Notify your neighbor and get him to come. 8561-50 Advt.

A liquid fire t the bedbugs, ants, reacl.es and fleas is what the new ehemlral discovery really is, although there is no danger or no damage to be done

ly usitig it to your priü c:s, furniture' of t lothig. This new c-mieal is known;

a reeky lJevns uuie:u?. r. i. . coft j

;ic. but tLU few eents will äive the pewer of riduing your butise of bedbugs. i.nt. rea.hei and flea if joa purchase 1'. I. 1. 1. Q. Is UFed and reeonn.r.ded by the leading iiogpitali and liailroud Companies as the hafest and quickest -ay cf riddlcg the pesky bedbufrs. ants, roaches. ; ial Hospital size 2.." makes fire gidk'iis your druggist has it or an procure it for ou or sent prepaid it Lt-r fire to your address en receipt o! trice by th" Owl Clerical Cx, Terre Haute, lad. The fiueee of I. I). Q. has caused Imitators to have ben prose. 'Uted, pe 1 Hin r an imiMtlon. (reuuine r. I. Q- i never peddled. Sold oj American drug storr. Central drug etnre. South p.end; Red Cress pharmacy, Mihawaka: Ope. fc Frumai dru stör, lllkhaxt, Ind. AdT.

WS

"NYet" an antiseptic cream lotion that removes nair. Will not irritate the skin, 59c.

1IYMÄ1 .Co mo and Sco Uf

Store Hours: Open 8:30. Close 5:30. Except Saturdav closed at 9:30

Djer-Kiss Talcum Powder, white or flesh, 21c.

The Suit Is Serving Its' Double Duty Now Warm days like these, yet a bit cool in the Spring winds are at the height of the Suit's own season. The simple tailore d skirt with a lovely Suit Blouse serves practically the indoor life. To slip on the jacket completes the uniformity of costume and is sufficient for the cooler outdoors. A most complete showing awaits you at Wyman's. Low price featured, $15.00 to $50.00. Baronet Satin Skirts $7.95 and $15.00 Th ese Skirts are made on straight lines with interesting pocket and belt arrangements and always more or less of the fashionable softness in the careful way of gathers at the waist. Brown, navy and black. Sizes up to 38 inch waist measure. Flannels of white or blaze: stripes will be extra smart for sport wear. $15.00 to $16.50.

IM ft

Untrimmed Hats Stapes for Every Type and Use In a variety of Summer straws and colors that can be easily trimmed at home with fruits, flowers, ribbons or elusive feather fancies all of which you can select from our Specialty Millinery Shop Second Floor.

The Afternoon Frock $29.75-$75.00 Full but soft in line are these Frocks, the charm of which lies in their simplicity. Several adorably youthful models in navy, black, brown and gray, with embroidery and bead trimmings. For morning, afternoon. For kitchen, porch, shopping, tea parties and dinners. You will find Wyman's Specialty Shop of Dresses with fashions of the latest mode, and prices reasonable. A Charming Blouse to Freshen the Tailored Costume $1.95 The discriminating woman will not hesitate to add this new blouse of marquisette to her collection. Exquisite in its sheerness it is well cut and simply trimmed A-ith an organdy collar, laco edged. Priced low at $1.95. Smart Furs Needed The tailored suit depends much upon the small fur neckpiece for its smartness. These Fur pieces including some of the new smaller shapes are selling here at

unusually attractive prices. Chokers of Mole, Marten, Opossum and Gray Squirrel $1 5.00. Chokers of American Mink and Stone Marten $39.50. Chokers, Hudson Bay Sables $50.00; genuine Fisher, $89.50 and $125.00: Russian Sable, $125.00; genuine Baby Fisher. $200.00. Fox Scarfs, taupe and platium gray,, $89.50 and $95.00. Mole Scarfs, $50.00 and $55.00,

Wymans is a Group of Twelve Specialty Shops

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had you noticed that many of the city's best grocers recommend "Busse's Bread" Your grocer (if he is the right kind of grocer) is anxious to please you. He wants you to have the best. To get full value for your grocery money. Thats why many of the best grocers urge thejr patrons to buy ( "Busse's Bread"

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BAKING COMPANY

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HARRY HARTMAN Paper Hinging, Tainting and Decora tics Ul Work Guaranteed Firat-Clai 418 N. Wood St. Phone Unco In 2233

Samuel C. Lontz & Sons

The Horns of Kleacft Iw2 Eiit 'Colfax Avenca

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Auto OX VOl K OWX TKKMS, 5 it Lonett lUe.'eflt Kate CxeU tj i

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INDIANA FINANCE CO

to i. m. s. nur. : X Corner Mla and tilnftoa if

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