South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 186, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1921 — Page 6
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 5. 192!
i
3HE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday .urns iu:.m:y ztver, Efiitor Member United Press and the International News Scrvico M rM:.? CJitlon. Member Associated Pres --v . v!'.r--'i V: : i -it'.rv'.y entitled to t5 V tof tt -ö P. at'' n f .".I :i,- t :. .-'lltl to It or not f!'( n,;... ; . . : i... ii n. if -.i:t:. n of tbl ppr. n-l iri i il : --v.- ; '- not PP'T ,f ti -:: ...... . i.tiot. .Ii r'.jrM .f puM! -..Hoa f "?cvJ ::. r.v riin M!n ?!v. FrlTdt. frnrh irhanr. OlT frftr nrr," .f pr.' n rr rtT1 rt mrU wartet. After 9 p. m. '! n!M t'-r ' to M i'" '.'10". ' le; artmer.t : Main 211. cjtj !-r; M ilu ofletj editor; Mala 2101. circulation o(ir::;.r;;t. jtt'!' '!'.! fTinv rtATFMr MTMn ftrol FTnTn TMItlon. fir,::.- ' 'f. . S-m-tny. IV. I:,vrM r7 carrier tn Fonta j:' ! an 1 VM iki. Jb'O) r.r Tsr !n aimnr. r 2v t7 !-. iv.lt t-n-1 It r.irrW In all rtW town, f 7 .V) rr J-i flln-, t IV tv tf e 'it. Ntorr.lnff or F.wmlnt Ed.tion. a-, .j u !;,.;::: Siliy. Ilrtered at tbe South bend P0"' 4.2!' i us him I i..dt-t mill.
r.axrs I?Y MAI
I'er Vrar
L ON Tin: AT, pnrTES IN FinsT AND M-ICONT ZO.SFS:
Mo.
12.7$
AM. OTIITTIIS BY MAIL: .v ?ro LO. F'-r! trn l:?i. f 1 A'. Per Month.
t Mo.
CO
JULY 5. 1921
Cor.:::
al gas df.'-r.'t make light taxe3. o
A roa-1 h g i s a :...m who Imvcs you both sldc-s. o The n-.v tariff protects milk. Infant Industry? o IVn-.ocrat3 fear thy now tariff, will make- them all cx-;iort3.
With -hart fkirt. worr.:in'd overhead expanse Is If';!O Conrrr.-H can't help the unemployed by Joining them. o Who carrs -where tmslnesa ha? been If it only conic 3 'ViCk? o Utopia: "Where landlords aro Jailed on the first oT ever month. 0 Ycu can't paint a Uly, but some g-irls realize- thej are not lilies.
NECKS. "If wo survey the pictures of our great-grandmothers, v. o thi rn clotht d down to the very wrh: and uj to tlw v ry chins. The following nice f women f-rt of all tuckod up their jrarmt nt.-j t tho eow. Aut tho rame time, the lad;, s considerini: that the neck was a very mod..--: i-irt d th- body, they freed It from tho.i.- y. k in whirh the pimplicity of their prand:r.( thrrs had inclosed It. In proportion as th- a'j rehned the dn t-till slunk lower AVho said this': Iiis- name was Joseph Addison. Er.-h estsayi-t. who üied In 1713. lie might have spoken it tod.ty coin;. -rnir.s? f:ihion in South Bend.
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MATRIMONY. Tarkvy his pa-1 a law requiring all men above 23 y. jrs to rnarry irnm..-..!iat-Iy. The penalty for non-co:i:ph-1 f' l :i iart. r of the offender's income. i at it.s aihh ti; carnival, awarded prizes whi-h tri 1 tarn. into rash partially when the tviiin.-r in u ii- s. and partially at the births of his Irt't thrt o cliildr-r-n. It apixart lh.it ir.atrimonlal ideas in France are Itlll ?uii.ewhat in ad ar.ee of those in Turkey.
DEVELOPMENT. Americans haw come to expect energy' and enterpr:. In a r.ew country. Why this a natural Is ex1 -l.t hy Frederick Mlgeod in h;s book, "Earliest Man." II,- -ay mankind developed originally through
: thrown into a now environment which taxed
nil th.-ir rro'arcort, but was not harsh enough to ü ;. it tht ir t I'fcrt. Thai's ;.!K' irnnt for Immigration of th capable. Imigran; dvvelop ab'lity in a new environment. Tii. at may help to explain the strength of the United Eiat-.
t
PRESIDENT NEEDS CLUB. rrrs't 1 1 1 1 1 i r . r is ii l to be getting impatient fce-ci'.i-' c r::r. -.-i is m air. 50 slowly on the legislation wh'h-h :.:pr. the administration program. Thia Irot-ra:a. in the main, is. designed to give the country' it', - f i"r m ;h- industrial and financial deprcsf - n. It i to b h. that the report is true and that th ir;.lt ::t w;.'. very soon adopt the policy of taking :! It idt-:.hip of conia-ss into his own hand ci:;d K'ih.-: at: n by et.r:in the- powerful pressure thit :h iitli- :a nt in the presidential ottlce. Ar,:;:'.; th members of censresa, thero scenis to be no I, .id. r.sl.ip worthy of the name. "Whether th Is duo to :!. la:k of ir. dividual abi ity of the mer.v lii-rä or th.vir an:i",uated ruK-s. the results, or rather the al . r.ce if r. aro the fame. lljwewr rrvit the y resident's impatience may be, it ii not a i itv h o. m pared with the impatience of the tax-burd- r.t d pui ho. It i:oe w iil.vdt ;y:nc that this public, lrroppeotive .f pohtios. will tack the president to th3 limit, if he v. ill ' threw down the gasre to the law m.ikro on Capitol Hill r.nl compel them to do their plain duty i r. st- a d of wtstir.g their time In worse than ind jamn-.ing.
THE ADVANCED AGE OF 28. Krank Tan:."', tun., u h. i an.e into notice in 1914 by h-a.'.m.r a :.. ! of unemployed men into a church cr.vl gettim: h::..-c. If s- r.t to prSon for a year, comes forth in 1 1 a.- a '.u:.".hia university graduate with liishe.t ho:'.:'" in h. .--try art economics. A ry"hiicalist in lt'l-i. he 1 r 'h.-ed by his friends as a liberal." V th re ware, ! ubtb s.. many el?r"o.nt in the oluth.-n f th- yo arc radical, it probably is j..-.-. if. mt it in 124 lie was 21 ye irs old and in 1.'- 1 h : The if :. f r :r.ir.y yur.g men an ad
vance
r.p.;tient id.eahst fre-juently go
u ay in x; er: nee before 2S, and d:;patC3
much cf his rr.-r. Many n ycun ester, an advanced radical at HI. turns up at 2S with a considerably mere t mp'. rV..- v;e.v of the world. At 21 he writhei when the t:: a; -h d T -ry patronizingly remarks that he ill ch ;: - . At IS he begins to concede that or.'-'s : if not h'.s .--poken opinions, do thift ?t tne y ..: r 1 y. At 21 he glows with a righteous ; n -v.. n to ah l"h poverty and oppression immediately! At 2 he n.ny retain his idealism, but be at ha-t tud him.-cir dijpc.od to cxtc-r.d the dat cf its reali..tio n.
JULY FOURTH.
! u::h usual cas uilti.
tt cf hdra:: : s. ::. n'-riils to '76. Our life has teccxr.e too e t- d f-r the oil dtys. Our thoughts are to t th'.y wire in the dayd cf eld. think of c ur i rr.nitnt, and cr country now.
for what we can gt out of them, firmed hi? th-s one grabbed and h-u i rr.crtiir,. f.n th. other half. To talk patriotism today, and attempt to analyze It bjs such, brands one with indulg- n:e In s- nt;mental luöh. That Im the trend of tho majority of minds. "W interpret the principles cf liherty '-s purchased with the bleed of our father. as the power, well es the privilege to do a- we p'.ease; to r.c-co our fellows with impunity, an 3 mako th government our servant in dolns: so. The "Spirit of 76" has losrt out in the complex days of 21. Recently Charta D. Williams cf the M'.chf-in diocese of the Epücopal church filed hin r s;gr.ati:i with that organization, explainin? that the pressure cf cnrmmercialim upon what shvu'd b? pre.-.ched and what tho clergy should fach, th.t he wojld have to decline the dication ana that Ids church might accept his resignation at cr.y tino- it mUkt fee fit. If It has come to that rass in the char li what might he .said of it els wh.r.? Coma r iilism ha declired itself God with gold th--- groit hi-'h priest. "Everything Is measured by the dollir." doclar d the bishop, "and Christianity, ev n. is being r' h -gatcd to the limbo of subserviency to the co in:in-r room." Instead of urging a larger support of religious Institutions by men cf means, he 11.-10 limitations beyond which they nhould 1. -t be permitted to go. He talk about democratizing Christianity; putting an end to a few men getting control of its grat organ, the church, presuming to buy their way into the Promised land while consigning the masses to spiritual darkness and commercialized misery. It hits the nail on the head; I3 enlightening as we recover our breaths following the Fourth. What the bishop has said might well have taken the place of Fourth's fireworks. ad that there seeni.s nothing, no voice, to arouse th? people whither we aro drifting; to a realization that if it go. s cn and on. the outcome is bound to be revolt, revolution, anarchy. Wo boast of our intc llectualism but we u seit like bone-heads. The "Spirit of 'TC" w;u kindred to all mankind, but the "Spirit of 21" eliminates the mnS3. raves- for a good time, nelf-ccntered, m-n-ctarized the dollar too often not only above the man, but above the Most High. America needs more preachers like the Rt. Rev. Bishop Williams. From his high eminence he crpeaks like a John tho Baptist "crying in the wilderness." o OtherEditorsThaaOttn w " - - -tzz:m TUG AMAZING LLNC.UMl. (Lxmdon doming l'ot.) What must foreigner think of us all? Tho Germans, ever since cur extraordinary Lthavior over the scrap' of paper, have given us up :. ho;eP-s.-. The French profess not to know us. but their knowledge" must be almost as perplexing to them as their former ignorance. Yet, perhaps, after all Ui- re ia a great deal of wisdom In our apparent folly. For Englishmen are like children, and have, therefore, a reason, and perhaps a sound reason, fi r everything they do. In the nursery play is the thing, an 1 la proceeded with on the comfortable uude: stan ling that fathers and mothers will provide the daily brtad and butter. In the same way the 1-1 ngli.-di race enjoys its sport, trusting to its .tatm'ii oh, daring assumption! to warn it of the- approach of danger. o DROPPING into i.irriiuis. (New York Times.) Snappers-uo of unconsidered triihs in the d iy'.4 r.eww must have been struck by the tivouent a pp. arance of literary name? unknown to them. An auto mobile accident i reported. Tho vhtim is said to be "a writer." Or Mill more unfortunately the principal figure in a swindling tr-ansactie.n is described as "an author." Neither name can be four.d in any work of reference- or in any publisher's list, or even in the Indexes of periodicals. Yet there they are in the public print, identified as gen; de lettre It ifl evidently a large and swelling classiheation of human activities. It helps us to understand better what was meant by the mob of gentlonun who write v.dth ease. The writing profession is undoubtedly growing larger every year. Though the census miv not record the percentages of literary men, they fully hold their own with the increase in population. And the basis of definition seems to be, cfTce a writer even a merely would-be- writer always a writer. A fond mother brings her just graduated daughter to a publisher's otfice and informs him that "Mamie has decided to devote hcr.-elf to literature." That, cf course, means one more wr:t:r, still another author. Ten years pass and Mamie is happily tending her babies and darning her husband's oeks, but Mill she w listed a.s ".Mrs. Fiydow, well known for the graceful tssays which sho wrote for 'The Beginners' Weekly.' " It is .;uite impe-ss.-ble to keep up with the march of intellect as shown in the immense numbers of those who write, une has to take tho geniuses on faith. They may cultivate literature on a little oatnuai. bat still tha-y cleave to it. They may make a f mpora rily resounding success, which it is ditlicult to understand until one remembers the French aphorism u'U 'ted by Abraham Hayward: "What makes the success of numerous works is the affinity between the mediocrity of the ideas of the author and the mtdioeri:y cf tho Ideas of the public." But. known er unknown.! thick and fast they come, these young nun and maidens who call themselves literature. A.s u mere matter cf self-defense, newspapers have to accept the classification for a great body of people otherwise undefinable. o xirw aspect of cattm: i:inPa;o. (Ixjndon, Ontarie, Advertiser.) It is the opinion of Moreton Frewen. the famous agricultural expert, in a letter addre.ved to Lord Finlay, chairman of the Canadian cattle embargo commission, that if Great Britain were to r-:n-.ve her embargo on the importation of live cattle for fattening, and freely imported cattle and ma.e fre :a the United States as well as Canada, he: b- tt-. r fee 1ing facili';:s and climatic conditio:-3 w..-.;ld .-..n enable her net only to e nd dead me it imp' : tath n. b..; very soon to export dead meat to Ana 1 ica. Whether the commission will be imprei-se 1 by these considerations remains to be s.- ;,. T.. i.- decision will, no doubt, be governed to a c- rt.tm extent l-y the opinion of breeders .f liv.-s; ,ek in th Old Country. Lord Fin'. ay hitr.sdf cvi:,-.f fr a
part of the country where the Pre. d. premier beef animal, the AN tah r.-Ar. ;: Ctine a fine art. and where the Short'.. .
..viii..cv.i liar. iikti. .w. . . v . 1
tn.
e e .
v. : : . 1
purposes, is als 3 bred to j erfectien. Iri Flnl.iy j ho:ne at Newt-m. Nairn, e-verl chs :h M ray i'.r:h. r.reund the shorts of which lie th... tin-, st pa.-tu: e lands in th--- c .untry. and whether th.- ;.:-:;:: lands are to become the feeding gr. i.n-N f o-u ,u imported cattle or be ret tin- d f r ;.".. ;h- an.n: . n which at pieent find ami le sus.en.ir.ee up a th .v.. r iuirtus e ens id er a: ion. There is an old sayinj in ctlir.d th.it or.v cug:t. to "krep their am fish guts for th- ir a;n s. 1 m.iw.-." ind it is quite po---Me that "the b.. tt.r fueling f c'.'.itlcs" to which Mr. Frewcii ref- r, may in the e;. - s cf many of tb.e farmers be better e:np. e-d in fitttnir.g the stock which they have f .u:. I s p. . :.'- able, than in furnishing f- d.b r fe r th- huvry t easts" to which the Irish w it r.ss referred It. ; the commission the other day. If a popular vote were taken. . however, th-r f.ems little doubt that there would to an e rwh"!mmg majority in favor of the free importation of livestock from all parts of tha wcrll. f.r th.e people of Great Britain have suffered too long from high meat prices. Not only this, but the .-carc:".y under such abnormal conditions ns th j-roduced by the war and the 1 Ig coal strike h is h- n k-er.ly felt. There is. therefore, r. a dcubt th it tiu i-m v vi the en; bar go on the importation of -.r. . l:-u store cattle would meet with. optihir appr '.al. ;'. after all, cheap food Is th- p- . pie's i::- ..:.:. ;.rd if that foe .1 can I- pr-red fr and .: 1 stead cf being imported in a frozen cond.uon, to much the better.
St
:
tl-A
Dill Armstrong
' -nnnm '
and about four inches in diameter. and hav it wrap; -d so tb.at on- ml ' ecru es down to a ion.r tapering point. ThT. put th" package urler your:
si innen "S- rve me."
'Twas the father's vcico. i And the brown thrush drooped his i
wrt. I arm and start down tk.e street. -Alas! D03. thou speak to me this I That's alii II , j word? j . i j I cannot ferve such a wee brown! Andv Keisberg will prohably be re-!
I turning fr-m Can iua s?.me of these,
eiays P.'eK.ug na.e am tirarty. :
Bu:
1 r- t -r rr.
.n:
t "rve m. And the fountain he
ire:
TUT. TF.ST OF A MAN. Thr test of a man is the fight he 1
It v. opt a iloul i.f -pray. ma.-a s. ; II ev ian 1 ree tioe, mi-rhty kin-:?! Th" 'r;t lha: ho dai''.v hnws; And I j-uch a l.-'ht au l "us. 1 ..s ! Tu' 'ay lie stands on his ieet and
thin-:?'' I tax s 1
Fate's numerous bumps and blows. A coward can smile when there's naught to fear, j When nothing his progress bars; 1 But it takes a man t e stand up and , Cheer j While s.me other fellow: stars.
But the father answered.
uni... f
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"S- rve me." And the toiler paud. An 1 sidly I er;. 1 ai'Ove, "ilowcan I serve my God?" hr. c.aid. "Wio-n my wh.'.e strength goes for my children's bread?" But the merciful One said, "Love S the brown thrush sang at the break fjf day. And tiie toih.-r heard as ho passed
that way
It int the victory after all. But the ficht that a brother makes: The man. who, dr;en against the-
GEORGE WYMAN & CO.
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 Except Saturday closed at 9:30 p. m.
Clearance of Spring Suits Reduced to $15.00, $29.50 and $45.00
V
I'
wall.
Still stands up erect and takes j The blows ,f fate with his head held ' high; , ,
.Bleeding, and bruised, and pale.
1 - ' 1 And the fountain splashed in the lis the man who'll wia in the by and j
dimpling pool
Th- te.le-r dranl; of the waters cool. A new strength came as he passed a Ping. And fatherhood sang in h's heart a song.
So each served God In God's own
way, But which served best, only lie can sav.
ClU'CIi SACKS.
by.
For he isn't ;-.fraid to fail. It's tho bumps you get. and the jolts you get, And tii" smocks that your couragestands. The hours of sorrow and vain regret,
Th.e prize that escapes your hands, , 5 That tost y ur me ttle and prove your i J 1 worth; : j
It Isn f the blows you deal.
C'V.
V
04
Surnrner
Hats O -:X-- , y at V s, v Reduced Prices An extra summer h.it is an inexpensive privilege now that they have been reduced to clearance prices. Knox hats. Mad-e Plvans, pattern all hats at the lowest prices of the year.
Tills is tho morning ytaj go back to But th.e blows you take e-n the good
woiK cu.-sing aliout th.e tirts vou
old earth.
punctured yesterday an 1 the fi.-di you j That show it" your stuff is real.
failed to catch.
A holiday wouldn't be eo bad if It wasn't for the day after.
INBAD. TUB SAILOR.
Once there was a man by the name of Georges Carpentier, etc., etc., etc.
"Carp" Is right, so scz Jack Sanders.
About the only way for some people to enjey a ejuiet day is to borrow their neighbor's phonograph.
Keep moing all the time; the place for the statues is In Jie parks.
HOW TO START A PARABF. Get a package bout 12 inches Ion;
Tho reason, Jake Ileckaman sez, skirts inspire t-o much humor is because brevity is the soul of wit.
Barry Scan km yesterday tole us the S.G7Sth story for The Tower that we're- sorry but we can't print.
A judge has ordered a man to kiss his wife every day, and 'twill be just like her to 1 at onions.
The Progressive exposition is on at Springbrook park.
MOTH FR'S VACATION Out to the summer cottage Mother and Buddy went, Out for a triad vacation, to stay till tho heat was spent; Mother was worn and weary, ncrvotir? and needed a rest, So to th.e Pake we s.t her. but never the tale we guessed.
i Sunday we left her settled, with I never a thing to do, j But th.e Watson's came on Tuesday j to stay for a day or two;
'lack to the grind Went Mother, lack to the same old same. And as soon r.s the Walsens left her, lour of the Bronsons came. "We'll help with the work." they ch'rtled, hut Mother must hake the pies. And M.t.her must cook their breakfast ere vor her guests arise; And while on the; porch they chat-
Ilavo you been there? If you haven't, latter chase yourself out. It's well worth while.
ted and basked In the wide out el oors. It was Mother who washed the dishes, and Mother who swept the Honrs.
Scarce had the Bronor.s vanished, when the Greens wroto in to say They'd come for a few days' visit, now Green hael a holiday; And the Greens and their young made merry ar.el followed, their hearts' desiro While Mother, to get their victuals, stood over the kitchen fire. It was then that I lost my temper. "We'll close up the place." I said. "If you are to take in boarders you can do it when I am dead! No more of these week-end visits, it is home to the rocking chair, And the porch and tho climbing res. s yeu can get a vacation there." (Opyright, lfi?l)
liertonBraleyjs Daily Poen 4äMny liouiewilS lament
I DON'T mind the cooking. I don't mind th.e cleaning Of rooms that are cove re 3 w ith dust; Toward mending and sewing I haven't much leaning. But do them, as hou-okee pcrs must: To do the week's wah isn't one of my wishes, And yet I can bear it, I think; Rut, oh, how I loathe and detest doing dishes The terrible dishes Unbearable dishe That glower at me from the sin,! THE making of beds isn't highly exciting. But still. I dont mind it a let; And scrubbing the Moor isn't very inviting. Yet, omehow, it troubles me not:
But I feel I'm poorest of ah th
,r fishes,
My t mper it puts on tho blink. To bend te the. duty of washing the dithes Tho wearisome dishes The drearisome d;.-hes That glower at me from the sink!
I'VIl r."vor found housework exactly enthralling, But-ustly it i.-u't so bad; It's only the dishes that se.-m so appalling.
nd make me so consdantlv mad.
a t e
I
ite tvt ry dhb. and the d.i-hrag that swishes! I h.ite pots and. pans as they clink I
ate 'em. I hate 'em th se darn dirty dishes Thos- hpitefuilest dishes
Th-
That gi.-wtr at me frm the sink! (Ce pyright, lt'21, by Newspaper Enterprise.)
i
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ONI; THING IN THF1R FAVOR NO PJlhrCTION FOR 11101
A"w.i" it can te so. :a :or on. . n and Br.gkam Ycutg that tb.ey,
voreJ courts.
much work to tlie di-
Arpir-ntly or. gre !s to continue ".: w a r pay even after reaee 3
csta': lished.
Cr
RI?M0N PjI'TTUR
am 1-4 cup cf butter with 1-4
WF ALL XIZFD n
General 'Vcol's suge'ticn that
pi'-.'T.fl b- r-::rh 'mu- rx
teasrm e: papriua. avi 1 1 tar -jocn ' : , , , dC" O r TO b. P ' ' f- t r ta
I J..U.UL H.
.1. . .
7 t
... h
NO Y. away f r v. st.'V with a
CHAILMIllSi:.
r.t Sp .'s c '. n be- r-m- ve .. r. ?;". u.. ' daul'luir th--
f r ' m char1 ' - I . fc, . 1 . .
White rhir-'.-'-'j-e
e ia v;ng. nen you return ean be w as he 1. the cola:
c
1. . .rr.vo u't bo in exc-lb-nt r -r. .'I- k'.ir.t.-'ni'v rr'.b,'
... w.. j - -
's are rarely ,
u v.' e u.
Sheer Blouses at Clearance Prices. Are arranged on tables for quick and easy inspection. Pick one up for your vaca:ion at $1.95, $2.25 to $5.75.
SA ' i
s 'Si.
Crepes Dimities Lawns Georgettes
-A .
9 Tt:
J
1
1
mm
VvV,- -
-v' 'To. ,
A
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1 .
earar.ee ot Sum
mer Dresses $9.75. $12.75 and $19.75.
From the Store of Twelve Specialty Shops
mm
v. rst t.y
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which everybody likes you will, too.
A delicious peppermint
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peppermint flavored chewina sum
that will aid your appetite and diges
tion, polish your teeth and moisten your throat. B122
terr
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fr. I-
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Very Mild
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