South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 252, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 September 1921 — Page 6

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FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 9. I92T THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

ISOUTH BEND NEWS-Ti ftit.S Morning Evening .:.iay J. M. aliirilENSON, l'uli.i-.r Yr-r. rr : A-"ocb!r! Prrr. L'rvited Press internal: jn.il Ntv z vjce

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SEPTEMBER 9. 1921

WATCH iEtV YORK. Mot ititf nstir.',' and important to all the peopl ar- tho i.rimuric in 2Cw York. Tuesday to j i.k rt randilate to run ac'ilnst tho Tammany incuuf'cnt. Thoro aro 7.0 00. .'00 reople In Greater Xew York, th- sreatf'St o;ty !n thfj world df spite tho claims lsnln which inrludes every one within lf0 miles rr.di in .rder to outoount it. The r ice 1 .idmittedly between tho present borough pr . sriden:. Curran. and Judge Haskell or I '.x rk lyn. The ivMie ia anarchy or law. Haskell 13 maKln;; ; p. to the prohibition law his platform. There U more th in an implied promise that if elected he will u.-e all hin powers to see that thirsty ;v YnrkTH are not moisted in their purcha.-es e-f Th- thaion will determine whether the greatest city in tho country will vote for practical secesniu and r-.mrchy for it means they wish to defy th; cor..tution of th" United States. If Mirrt.vful liv.'re. the liquor interest will come bari; a'ain into politics as the contendu3 in many r.ths, perhai in the nation. o THE SEARCH EOR YOUTH. The quest of et-.rnal youth L? centuries old. Tif- chemi.-t. physician, inventor, who concccts a drug that givs tho vitality of early life n thcie of jp.us would have the world at hi feet. Wcnvn tc -ond with mony and time to the pea!;- of thooe who promise to prolong the semblance of girlhood by artificial means. Men endeavor to obtain the (Mine results through ministrations by others. Ponce, de Is-nn -nought he might find some secret sarins in which h- might bathe or from whicn he might drink and 1 e forever young. Two women fe-m to have found it and they did not discover it in a drug store or a beauty parlor. Saroh Bernhardt, at 80, successfully portrays trie passions of early womanhood upon the staere, til1 attracts with flnfhe9 of beauty. She Ls writing a hook now. In the fall she will appear at European capitals in new plays who.so v.-onl the learned this summer. She stih charms and live. really lives In the present and not in memory. In th! country Mother Jo'fics, labor leader for much more than a half century, travels from strike centers to natlonil capitol. ru.hei? to the nuost of industrial conflirt. talking, urging, planning, ex'nortir.ET and uinp up an enertry that would tax 'he physical endurance of men half her age. Fhe la 92. antedates all exlftinfr labor organization and today fates the world with the samo militant spirit that ihe hv-.ved In the day.- when labor unl-nn were In their Infancy. Firth Bernhardt in words and Mother Jones by t-xamp-. rivo tiu iedP t0 th0-sc wh0 wouU1 rema!n for-ver younc "No play. Lrtts of work" says the Divine Sirih. a;"fi SO. Mother Jene?, ned 02 keeps on "worning 1 and doesn't even take time to tell how she does it. Kternal youth must be purchased at the price of personal exertion. It to found In a new interest each day. in a work that knows no boast of yesterday's accomplishment, that fees only the task at hand and that looks to the tomorrow only as another opportunity for accomplishment. It cannot be rubbed In by a beauty artist and goat tland have not been striking surccwa. .But it can be found m service and keen interest.

THE TELEPHONE ABSURDITY. It -fore the telephone monopoly send any mora :tp.:o:-:s:s t South Hend to persuade the people that ;hi-y should pay an Increased rate, it should be warned acainst the sort of argument which A. I. Lewis, division superintendent, made to the Ijions club. It may be presumed that Mr. Lewis, a fine man per.-or. illy and loyal to the Interest of hU company, mer-lv present d the viewpoint of the company h. r. he tried to explain its outrageous demand;. "Wh.it is it worth in times of emergency and sickn, .? v. -. it i it worN to you In your business? What would it cost yen to remodel your bu.Mmfc s.a that you could pet along without it?" he asked. And then he ar."vered his own question by lellin; cf the experience of a i hysician whose telephone, put out of service by storms. lost him from $25 to $3' a day. The questions indicate that the company his not lost that old viewpoint by which public ut-ilit.e were accustomed to measure their charges by "all that the tratüc will bear." The tflephcr.e !s a public utility and aj such 1 partner with the community it serves. Partners do no; rob each other and continue in business The public is ready and willing to pay for service rendered and pay a fair profit for that fervice. It dec. not intend to stand and deliver on th3 basis of the implied threat of reconstructing its business so as to get along without service. Th present company has a monopoly. Its frnn-ch'-se. and permit to use the etreets are a.s Important assets ns its wire.s and its exchanges. In Its demand for more money there must be a clear showing that its service costs more than it collects. The people want no bankrupt concern-'. Neither do they want to be taxed extortionately In order to pay dividends for holding companies. Trogrcss In telephony should make it possible for the company to decrease, rather than increase, rates. It has learned how to send phantom meeags. Tb? automatic, if lnal.'ed. would cut iatnr cos'? to aliro&t nothing. It now sends five messages at or,i

v-- one long distance wire where a few rears ago

one was pcvfdble.

Tor the company to base its demand for money on th tac:s of what it 13 worth to call a doctor in a rf nines i- return to the days of corporation of the b!ackjack and corruption. That day has, --Jrr.rdy, pass?d. T!.m .,p;e want to fw-e the book.". They want to know aM have tvtry right to know now much r.v.r..y u ccllectod. where it goes, how much h spent

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for salariert of otPiCials to whom South Bend 13 but a railway station on the map, what it really coa.s to deliver telephone serlce. Ion't, please. Insult the intelligence of this alert city by asking qmtions "ahich Bhould only be uttered a threads if used at all and surely the te'eplior.e company dees not mean to threaten.

BOLSHEVISMS CROP. "Every hour counts." This is the message that wa.s flashed yesterday from the city of Samara to the American relief expedition. Samara Is 875 miles away from Tetr:grad. Fifty thousand men, women ami children are huddled together in deserted factory buildings. In tent, shivering, hungry, starving. "Every hour counts." Refugees in rags are carrying coffins to the cemetery. Ie.ith from typhus and cholera claims il3 victims almost every minute. The living turn almost envious eyes upon the dead. "Women desperately try to make bread from melon rind? and sunflower peeds, ground into a sort of meal by hand. Emaciated children tug at the few rags which are left to them and plea' for nomething to eat. "Evc-ry hour counts." rarentj are taking 100- children each diy to nfujre r,Mtior..s In the hojc that some food may te obtained. Thir hearts are torn by the sight of thes little ones waiting away. Some of th more desperate kill their own babes that the suffering may not be prolonged. "Every hour counts." The few who have been able to raise crops this season resort to any device that cunning may sugK'st to hold to what they have. There are bitter clashes. Fathers are ready to murder for a crust t? save their children and other fathers are ready to die In defense of their dwindling stores. The number of those who have already succumbed to famine and to tho diseases which have followed in its path runs into hundreds of thousands. Before winter many millions must depend on relief from tho outside and from tho dylns. starving people the message from this center tf (desperate need is: "Every hour counts." This is the final harvest of the seeds of bolshevism. The rule of the jovietti failed to induce thJ usual planting. A great droughth reduced the crops to a minimum and the people who were hei3 captive to the new rule are now paying the penalty with only American relief, now on the way to stand between them and death.

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BUSINESS AND POLITICS. Chicago can be depended upon to give birth to a. new scheme at lest once a month to gouge toe public through a combination of "business and politics." The latest scandal is the "dyera truet" by which a monopoly of the business of cleaning and dying was created. The process was simple. A combination of the more important establishments was formed, or a gentlemen's agreement as to prices reached, and then there was a journey to the city hall for a legal stranglehold on the basinets. One little ordinance was all that was needed a seemingly harmless law. It was one that could be defended volubly by shrewd special pleaders as a 'protection of the people. All that it provided was that no new plant for this business j-hould bo established In any building within 50 feet of any other structure. Inasmuch as Chicago is solidly built, th- ordinance prevented any new firms from engaging in the business. The ordinance, -jnder the claim of vested interests, did not disturb those in business when it was passed. Having thus secured an iron clad grip on the situation, the combine proceeded to charge what it pleased. Chicago is learning that eternal vigilance Is not only the price of liberty but also a necessity for those who wish to live. The special object of attention from now on will be its political masters. o Iove Is blind and so are American tigers. o DentL-ts get on other people's nerves. o It's fine to hit prices when they are down.

Girls finishing schools teach how to handle fig ures.

0 t3rEditorsTlian Q nvs washing rrni nua i.osis away. York Tribune.) The Englishman's insistence on his morning splash, even If he has to carry his tub about with him, and the American's determination to have a bathrocm i:i his home, regardless of cost, are justified at latn. A daily bath is considered either a luxury or waste of time by enough people and nations to make ?:r James Crichton-Urown's statement at a conference of sanitary inspectors in England a contribution to the science of health. "If eevy one took a daily bath, hot or cold," he said, "tuberculosis would virtuailv disappear from the world." 11c says we have a lorn; way to go to attain a proper standard of personal cleanliness. He would legislate the great unwashed out of existence by having a tub in every home, even if the state had to supply it. There is much in this suggestion, for there are -till people, even in America and England, who do not know the value, not to say the joy, of a daily s'nib. That the fcsh is weakened by bathing is a superstition that persists in too many homes, phvsicians could dispel such beliefs if they wouid, bait perhaps they ft-ar to irt-ult their patients even when they know the advice is needed. o

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IHIAINS ANd IIALDMISS. ( Synuuix' l(t-Standanl.) Bald heads are a proof of thought. They are never se.n in an insane asylum. The mere hiir one has. the less brain. Thus has the dictum come forth from the voluble overseer of Zion City, Glenn Wilbur Voliva. . The highbrow, the intellectual giant, must be as hairless as a Mexican Chihuahua dog, or more so. He with the flowing locks is a zany, a man of little mind. No more shall the jokesmith train his guns on the shining dome of man, no more shall the front rows at the burlesque and other theaters be the target for laughter and scorn. For Voliva has spoken, and out of Zion City have come words of wisdom. The hathss fool ur.cn the highways, uncovered that the breezes may bring more power to his fading capillaries, is a tit subject for the padded cell, and he whose peak rises in all the majtsty of nakedmss shall stand among the immortals of intellectuality. Mr. Voliva's latest photograph shws that he has as much hair as is becoming a person cf his years, a moderate, well-kept thatch, but he must have hopes that through the thinning locks will eventually appear to delight the world the noble head that will bring him admittance to the sacred circl? of the unclad skull. Jeremiah was right: "For every head shall bo bald and every board clipped; upon all the hands shall le cuttings, and uroii the loins sickcloth.' The International Union of the Shining Pa'e witl arir-e as one man and hail Glenn Wilbur Voliva a? the ir coming ruW w hen he shall have shed the clory cf his locka.

a fvTisrn:i ti:li:phoxk rsrnv While the Kiwanis, the Rotarians. the Lion?, Timers, Owls. Ants, Odd Fellow, Knights of Columbus and other organizations of the city are pawdng all over poor old Ed Bonds because he happens to manage the telephone company that wants a

! raise In Its rates, we want to lay be

fore the reading public of South Bend a clear, concise, concrete example of a satisfied telephone user. Without mentioning ' any names, we will say that the satisfied phone patron, wro has Just been brought to our af.ention. is a young lady with bluo eyes, brown hair and of very excellent disposition. The excellence ef her disposition may have something to do with her being a satisfied telephone U3er we really can't say as to that. It is very apparent, however, that he is pleased with her phone because she Is constantly smiling while using it, which. by the way, Is on of her chief occupatlonj. Early in ho morning the young lady arises and Immediately calls up somebody. She never seems to have the leaft bit of difficulty in getting her numbers; at least we never have heard anything of the kind. To our knowledge, she has never uttered a word of complaint. "We Just bring this case to the attention of Tower readers, because we realize that Mr. Bonds, of the telephone company, la worried, these days, and we earnestly desire to help him out In his days of trial If we posflbly can. Oh, yes, we nearly forgot to mention who the satisfied telephone user is it's our little daughter Evelyn and the 'phone she uses has a baso to it which is filled with candy beans! "We'll be glad to hear from others.

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his beard off some dark night). Mr. Charle B. Sax on Thursday ordered j hotel authorities to have extra boas , placed on the doors of his room. ! Mr. Sax refused to issue any rrate- j ment in regard to the matter. Messrs. i Rose and Fishgrund, however, both 1 gave out statements of 10,000 words :

each with reference to tho situation.

tab Li 3 iTTiQurirn ; LESSON NO. 2. ( Never hesitate to take the last j piece of bread or meat. 'Causo if you j

don't some one else will. Never hold bones In your fingers; uso a pair of pliers. If you wish to attract attention, act loud and boisterous. Always use your fish knife when cutting butter. iVhen you rare an apple, peach or plum always hold it in your hands. as. a fork is eo awkward and you won't soil the fruit very much. Always cut off the kernels wdth. a knife when eating corn, as it saveS your teeth. Never eat too much of one article,

as it will attract attention. This don't j

go for liquor. Be ure to be easy with the butter as It is very expensive. Never ask for a second helping of anj'thing. It don't look right and you won't get it anyway. (Except at Bill Reid's hotel. Barron Lake.)

PEVKLOPJLEXTS IX THE SAX CASE. Reading in "The Tower of Babel"

that Fred Rose had rented the room

next to his'n at the Oliver hotel and

that Davo Fishgrund was going to rent the one on the other side (for the purpose it was said of clipping

AUTO NOTES. John Cully and a party, John tells us, were on their way to Fish lake the other day, and it seems they got lost. They inquired of a farmer what was the name of the next town.and what do you think he did? Can't guess? All right; he pointed to a tsign a short distance down the road and said, "Detour, ono mile and a half."

HELD AXI) STREAM XOTES. Bob Schnelle opines that if Adam Beehler started on a trip to a lake for the purpose of catching enough fish for his family he would undoubtedly get grabbed off by the game warden.

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FAIR DEALING.

Believe in his promise until " he

breaks it, Believe him honest until he lies. Honor his name until he make3 It A symbol for conduct which men despise. Believe aim fair till he deals unfairly. He has a right till he .provess untrue To be met as a man who will meet you aquareiy, He should be judged as he deals with you.

Givo him your faith until it Is shak

en, Trus: him until he betrays your trust,

Take his word as you'd have yours taken, Let your dealings with him be Just. Give him credit for fair endeavor. Make him your friend till he proves untrue. He may be worthy your trust forever. Brand him not till he's false to you. (Copyright, 1921.)

URGE BUYIXG V. S GOODS. Editor, News-Times: We have been Instructed by the Commodore Barry Council A. A. 11. I. It. to write to you with regard to the movement now on foot for a more general patronage of Americanmado goods in South Bend and vicinity. No doubt you have abserved the ever increasing flood ef foreign made goods in our stores and perhaps it has occurred to you that the sale of thes goods naturally cuts down the sale of American products. America is passing through a period of Industrial stress and depression at the present time, and there are millions of men out of work. It must be quite evident to any thinking man that the more we patronize goods of American manufacture, the less we will be haunted by the terrible spectre of unemployment which Is now stalking throughout the length and breadth of this rich and resourceful country. During the last few years most of our American fraternal and other organizations hav been engaged in a program of Americanization. Now is the time to test our 100 per cent Americanism! Are we willing to make sacrifice in order to advance America's interests? Foreign manufacturers taking advantage of the difference in wage scales are able to undersell us In our own markets. American labor depends on the American market, and It necersTrily follows that this market depends upon th American purchaser. Is not our duty plain?

More Truth tfThasi PoGtn) '

You can enter many stores in South Bend today and find a considerable stock of foreign goods, while American mills are either closed of working part time, and yet the storekeepers find no difficulty in disposing of these goods. Britain is our most formidable competitor as well as our greatest debtor. Her friends in this country' complain that England is unable to pay her debt to America. They suggest that for the sake of international trade, it would be a fine thing to forgive England that debt; but they do not mention the millions of dollars she is loaning other countries in order to increase her trade. For instance the fifty million dollars she loaned the Argentine. Besides, Britain paid her ex-s-erv-ice men a substantial bonus and is paying her unemployed a pension out of the money borrowed from the United States. British statesmen and businessmen think only of England and it is about time for Americans to turn their attention to Americ-a's interest. Therefore as American citizens, we suggest that your organization take a more particular interest in the protection of our industries and keep them working full time. Insist on your purchase being the product of American labor. Yours very truly, VINCENT O'CONNOR, EDW. S. HAGERTY, L. J. MURPHY, M. J. KEYES, Americanization Committee. A. A. K. I. R.

Next morning, light hearted and joyous.

You fly from the poisonous fen, J And virus you bring to nnoy us ! Again!

TO A MOSQUITO. Our murderers attitude toward you Is not on account of your greed; KRUEGEE MORE TR1T HTHAN FRIDAY Our murderous attitude toward you Is not on account of your greed; We'd only be- to glad to afford you The drop from our veins that you need. No anger we'd feel when you bite us. And draw from our persons your fill. If only you didn't requite us So 111. Hue you. when your mca! I? completed.

And your turn you complacently; hug, j Don't know when you're handsome-j ly treated. j Or feel you're a fortunate bug. ; Not you: to the marshes that bred you Your nocturnal Journey you wing. And leave in the hides that have fed you.

Your tstir.g!

And so. as you well might conjecture. Had you any reason possessed. As we come to the end of our lecture. You will pass to your eternal rest. You die of the rage you engendered As ungrateful wrong-doers should. Who nothing but evil have rendered I'or good. (Copyright, 1921.)

TA3IE SPORT. Pancho Villa nov spends his time hunting wolves, which must seem to him like pretty small game.

HOPEFUL INDICATION. ; It Is a crime to givo .way liquor. but our experience is that those who ' have it are usually extremely law J abiding.

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If you can't find one, or two, or three charming hats among this fall's wide assortment there must indeed be something radically wrong with you for there is every color, every shape, both soft and stiff. The small soft duvetyn and velvet hats are simply trimmed with novelty jet and bone and feather trims but really the "real thing this year is the hat verging on the picture hat and it's been a long time since the large hat has been "Good." The Shimmy Hat is of Spanish origin, as are many things this year, it is of panne velvetwith the front turned well away from the face and with black, jet bangles dangling from the rdge of the upturned :rown. For the black canton afternoon dress there are two models that the smartest of smart people could hardly censor. One is a panne velvet, turned up crown and inlaid with paradise in front another is larger wi th the b rim turned down and paradise along the edge. Hew Suits. Th ere are always tricotines of tailored lines for :he woman who looks best n the severe street costume an d th ere are soft ma:erialed suits which have a tendency toward tailored lines but diverge slightly from the "straight and narrow" at least sufficiently to admit a bit of fullness in the skirt of the coat and a wee bit of trimming. Suits ranging in price trom $25.00 to $195.00. The suit for the smart young miss may have a short flary coat with wide raglan sleeves, embroidered or deeply banded with fur blouse back or straight There is one, a box coat effect with kimono sleeves, collar, cuffs and coat cuff bottom banded with fur that is a three piece suit. It is in deep maroon and set off with mole which forms an unusually attractive choker collar, $195.00.

that announce the fact that fall is here and winter close at hand as surely as the turning of the leaves, the harvesting of crops, and the long stretches of golden rod along the roadside. Indeed the designers seem to have taken inspiration from nature in the fashioning of the newest of women's wear. The materials are as soft and velvety as a butterfly's wing or the petal of a flower; the colors are true autumn shades: Midnight blue, the black of a moonless night, the brown family in its entirety nigger brown, bronze, burnt orange, henna, gold and fuschias have gained prominence this season for the reddish purple shades are more than popular. In fact, even the cut of the sleeves reminds one of bird or butterfly wings, they are so full and in a long fur coat, one looks as though it "just grew" on.

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The styles are so new perhaps you won't quite like them at first but that ;s ever the way we get jsed to a thing and hate to ?ive it up although we are mpposedly constantly Iookng for something new. The tricotines and poiret rwill frocks are straight line giving even the plumpest Df us a slim appearance Dut, although they are simole in cut there is no tendency toward simplicity of trimming and trimming this year means bead, beads, and more beads to match the frock or in contrasting color or colors sometimes combined A-ith embroidery, $19.50 :o $59.50. Silk frocks are all in iome'form of CREPE, Can:on Crepe, Crepe sitins, Satin Canton and almost nvariably they are in black or silhouette as it is low called. Ribbon trimming in loops seems to be favored, wood beads, jet beads, novelty trimmings eyre ribbon in bands. There is often a touch of a bricht ihade of trimming. Some are very straight line and Dthers have drapes and panels, $29.50 to $75.00.

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Thre Is renIy nothing to compare with th French

badd blouses.

;ey are ex

quisite. Th'V are In overhlcusestyles, some quite short s.nd --mc I'ng. fme r.r straight, some are- draped, sorr.o have winged pvos. They cume in every color, with just the rl.jht contrasting color note. $19.50 to 37.50.

From the same old kinds dF animals, with the same old names but a brand new assortment and cut. For the plain coat, plain luit, or dress, tho small rhokers of stone marten, table, mink and mole are insurpassed, 510.00 to H5.00. And the stoles of mar:en, and mink, wi th fetchng tail trimmings arc rmart enough to be the tcynote of any dbstume, M65.00 to $98.50. A coatee is really warm inough to be worn all year around with a heavy dress or suit when it is really cold they are quite warm rnough and when it is A-arm they gather loosely about one and give just i h e necessary warmth, 185.00 to $325.00. The short coats are really the most youthful and muskrat, mink, mole, seal or Siberian squirrel are rach every one chicly luxurious, $110.00 to $325.00. The skirt length coat ire developed in seal, mole and Persian lamb, $295.00 :o $425.00. Tiew Goals Evora cloth in midnight blue with collar and cuffs of georgette wolf his tiny ribbon panels and tiny silver beads it is really handsome, $165.00. A Volney colored Lapanta cloth coat, with mole trim has wide baggy sleeves and is heavily stitched in self color, $125.00. Moussyne in a warm brown has a cape sleeve with tiny straps. It has a beaver collar and is really unusual, $195.00. $1 79.50 is really cneap For a Pollyanna cloth coat with dollman sleev-s. It las fancy ta?sel trimming, Huge beaver collar and unjsual embroidery. A more conservative brown Pollyanna cloth roat has pinch shoulelers and ripple skirt very' !arge beaver collar anel :uft3 and a tiny bit cf cmbroidery in the back, $159.50. Coats range in pnee from $25.00 to $195.00.

Entire Second Floor Devoted to Ready-to-Wcar

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