South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 22, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 January 1922 — Page 6

SUNDAY, JANUARY 22. 1922

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

EOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday j. m TrrnnNTON. rubiiv-er. As3ochted Prcs United Press Intrnatior.nl News Service r, j(i,rMvi fr- '' 'r-dr er.!'td tf tl frtt M'rut'n f nil .-. fi?(-y.x rrrdit-d to It or no! tt?rr!i rrr.f.. 1 ii r.;..rr.ir.. r-HM.'-a of tMi rVr. ta4 dtc f h Ir-rsl ut .t'd L'Ttiu. 'it! cl.ei tot pl'ij t .It ifterccca fi;ltl'Q. Prion! Hdn Zn-W ?P1 21. nrnrh rifhanftN Trr.Ms of sunscnii'TiON

firrV FttIc Ifrrrlr.r r.1 r-tr-!?. rr w,'r rtfrlnj in 1 S"t:r."y, jt wr-k -thT -x'fti Sur..'iy, c:? jfir

UT Mill rfnr-lrg nr "ndij-, r rral reifi. en jeir ' lb oth-r by null ' ' . rneiMl lit S,, ath Pr ! rt 0' n S'x-on'l nam Man.

m onti 20 Onti 110 00

JANUARY 22. 1022

77E GREATEST FORCE. A t-rhr.i:a! d'? id-- fr- m tr.- United States arrny

:o- rr'-'!pnt after ho had

ha hn par ' r'r

I Lc : . 1 ?r th- r p ? " had :;r,lr:' air

f a whi'e-h dp d rr.othrr who i;r.:,"I,.t:vab!' .sacrifice- to

rrah

1 T

r - 1 .

. 1.4

I

- A V.

-o ? ,'.!", 1 1 . i .'.::pn w.'in tit::.? iu

that h-r 1 ' v !.v 1 tri -d by courtmartl il and piJ:.' to a f-dfril prison. c:- r , , r,-. f a r. d had no earning ca-

tin. v.riM

to t h; " r. I: a .o v. i : 1 prl-- n " 1 1 She j l rt I e-u ' ' did v. a!!; for :t 1 t! ' her - t ' t ..- w :.

rem c'. ' ly t jf rit ."it ''r. to I'.1!

h'-r to favj enough to j,'0 . i'. 1 tikn her toy from hi.i

v. -iV.: th di.stan-.-c, anil actually j rt of tho way. Sho FtoM v.ci' 1 ar, 1 thf r. v.-rro io nld" ! to the lcdirg and :':', a. 1 IT 1 1 o iTiony that ho rv j.-r on h-:r "way.

Tfi- rr

1 . :

v. 1 t :- h a trip v.a ; r. oc. iry at all.

circMr.t uv v. 1

for th bo'-, vhvi ho ".'a-", arnstod, v.a-s In tho unlfor::i r f th' H-rv;": ur.dr an u'suir.'d iuno. If- h.-id hf.cn a icidl'-r tut ho v.lshf-d to ro back hor.i" to r-'. th-.s kütio ir.ot.hor. IÜ3 furlough iseemd alto-.'-th'.r too short and ho overstayed its limltatl'.r.. and w j. tlun faced by a punishment v.diich "h" dread. 1. 1 1 w . nt- d t' a-Tvc in tho army but ho feared the p. r.-:I:v fr r his di.-obedi r.co of order., .so ho promptly rc.. nli.-t d uri h.r a neu namo and was doint: th .u,r'K v. vh.f-n ru.-c was di -ov ' r d a?id he v.r. a inipriir.od a.? a deserter and a criminal. It ndht yceni to tho.3 who have not learned to think with military minds that a man who Foemed m - iwr to s'.ay In tho army that he would sacrifice h? name, müht be punished. If at ail, In some other wiy than puttir.:; him In stripes, dishonored and di.-zrn cf d. Mut whatfv-r jv;:t:ce or nec.dty miht have cati--'d h'.s f-' Titence, the facts did not matter to this moth r win) taw only babe at hr breast now serving In a f"Ion'.- r. d and wbicn her b'ttors wero lost In tho intriraf,- m i.-; of military discipline, she started on h' r Icn--: trir. It is many mil-.-- from Montana to "Washington, b-it finally Kid t here and finally reached tho prrs'iuo f the prc.-iilcnt to pload an only a mother it, ay pl ad, for her boy. ' The world has torao to understand the rower of fftroi-K forcc-.s iu nature and In humanity but It has nvrr yet plumb1'! tho strength and endurance of a üvitl'r'? Iovp. Mm his Parno-1 to flaf-h nicw?9 through the ait-. t p. r.t iiat.; the heavens with great fla&hc a of P.rh. t- in:ii;i'T the elements of wind and rtorm. I'.ut j-.o ii. an 1.? yet found any point at which the p-. .- in .i mother heart c-a503 to roach out Its pro-tfi-rin iar. Th mind of man hai been able to analyze and i.-produ.o the fi'iots which drive ships beneath the and plant.' through tho air, lias come to underp' im'I th" pow-r that 11 In atomic force and In mmhu-t i'"'n. but m ither th heart or the mind of n-an h i.s br-n able to en-ate a situation where the throl.- " empathy can bo .mothred In tho heart of tho woman who fondle; a baby's face asalnst her hr n?t and hears tho melodies of angels behind lt3 first cr-.Tdnr cricv. VYlu-n irh-on doors cl.xo upon tho boy, tho mother li. -u- f."d!o".s to tho cell, to comfort and cherish. To h"r. l.r. i ver tho labe at her breast. "A !-!-'! h.ii.nui cdp.:", riie Ftands at hla eido in an 1 r ur p: . h . r.vitu' him not. mro bocause there i- - i;-.- t' hrr love, but glorified in the t'.p I.:'': !' ;r--s fcr th- child s.ho cuddled. W.i th- r". i!o :. -vi frurp". even a thought of c f r.--::r- rr o'"::ir!'Unt In th heart of this mother v. 1ki i:..u i. hl a'Tt"a a continent to save her eon? p.. y.m b icv tliat h even counted the toll, th privation, th v.-arln.s which rtnjt hive conn to Jir? Ti yu bl-po that pho vcr thought of 1! It was "fin l;T in -trT.gth or Jn health to make this J- u m- ? If you hav such a thcught you, too, have failed with all the count! million.? to understand thll pr-ateat force in the world, . eternal, undylnff force that timelCi, uncruiurraMo and unflinching. Th 5.cr- of all civi'Jiatlon !s written In its ;-t l ength. Tho gI'T- of the future rotj lipon lt.

1 11 Y THE DFFEXSE? ov. M.-Or.iy 5 "n s :t Ftatemont to tlio public ; da:- d- f' r. l;: : a Imir.i-tratlon of the parole syte r.i l-c.t!;.-'. h tllp tho members of the libra The If p'-re,-::-. 1 Mat! . "there la a great rnls-

rf the clemency

t.

xt- r.i

Krantt-.!." Ho th.---n pr'.vfi.j.; to show that only a few pard' Tf ai:.l '-.rol-- h.ive le-n granted. Th- vt.-t mi-rht hav more profitably pointed v. i- i' )'.-. ;-'r--r.,,d to th ir.cn who wore given clom-or,-y afti-,T- th,'v cro freo. Vh. -it r. a'.'y Important In any system of demtr..t thc5e to whom It extended are re

turned

oful lives.

.... i .

. r t. r.

p-".r-oc f runhm2r.t 1 to not on'y deter

rj r-rt-t ar ortm.'S in to r.ir tne rerson

in a fr'u.-.- rf ir.ir.l where ho on?o mere

'.lows a ia-.v f-'.l nr. 1 -rde-r'v life.

Tt sv r waeto to Imprison men on tho theory th it locking t!i'-i up prevents them from committing ether crim-.-s. Tito of that Is a death f-r.tn'o for -'"r- effr.'?0. The pv.rpo3 cf clemency is to enable men who have I-HrrM tbel- .m to b'-corrso useful members of foolo'y. It would bA jntT-ir.r to follovr ach case In v. ;-ch a pardon or parol- has b.-n granted and dis

cover wl: it tVf.-- .. n Ii-

It 1ö e;i:--ion.il 1 if

real deterring effect u; n: crime and whother many Etn e.r" checked In tht ir Impuls. to break laws by & fear of purdshment. The great d'.r ruction cf th. erimlnal law comes f: am the f.. -r that through tho machinations of 6hrewd la ' :ts. thro-ih the delays and lne-rücien-cJ of publio pr .outor.s, e nly a email percentage the v. ho hr- .k laws ar ever punished at all.

inq- with their lihrty.

-oej- srr.tenres have any

Tlie pup

f th" l'.it !i and Canadian eys

tern over that of Am-.-ric.i !.- upon the fact that nd pur.it hm-jnt Is ccrtd.u to füllcnr every crimes

In tho countries men w!io break la-.rs know that tl;ry ar fuile certain to bo punished. The peverity of the eentence has little to do with tho mattrr. Tho Pure ftui certain detection, the prompt and impartial trial, the practical lrr.poviLi'ity of csoppo the facts which thoe who can cr.ly be mad. goo, throusrh far r-cotrtL:; ani v. h'.'du hr.ilt crimv5 in tho-; countries largely to t!;o dds cf violence oraniitt-d In the hr-at of pa-ion or under the Influence of drink. There is little of tho carefully plannM crime which prevails in this country whn the who make big hauLs know that their loot will enabl them to delay, If net eptlrely prevent, nny punlphnont. The rardonlng power Is the most important on which the governor f xrc'.,.. Thf re ' an 1 o no quarrel with It If the man who exercises It can show" a fair percentage rf these to whom clemency la extended, living normal and useful livta. "ot fewer pardon?, but more reforms is the demand.

1

SHORT FURROWS By Kin Hubbard

)f advertising is g"od advertising, j

then Vi: on H still president, llyki-

tno p!s aren't feiler's on t!: hoi:--. I got :.

sllir.g. and Hocke.

ol f

I o -. r

:ivV.r..-t a mo

phor.e, but when on cf my n ! ?h - i Tli rr lins thrrr rrrs nt thj door,

at

bors bawls throuch It all dar lore. ' Iln no thT wlfo nnd sli'l

then I get fore ar.d writ" to the j fotir.

X:u'i.e

paper-

WA5TI I TN'GTON" XV UNTER.

Lter in llfs F-a if r n" d

waited po lor.g

, w o u a

"Diversion's th' thir.g." hall Tell

'.Ii iiny, t uay, ;n p.. .fppta out o to-.v

Fairy Greito Picture Pai ioj. ' t U5!no

v.;!i dm.

Uli

If you trj- f git him

t-11 yea that divtrdor. So

in a his

"Ther wuz a tuae when n.i.xln' pitas- j limes ho worries along uro with business wuz pop'larly sup-i an' If h's made o' hon

rc?rd f bo th' ir.Cft direct route t'

, i r ' . i ,

bankruptcy without tunnels cr dust, j usual. Coif, 7' clav dive rsion ranks right along '"r?. carln' ft

with fresh air, dry feet, graham ! .-bavin hlmstlf. or

'rea l an otner essentials t human ; w;:i worK wonoers

ii Litsir.c b o'.vhn'.

till he1 4 4. he hangs on

a ?

go- S f

T'oker. rl;.:k

own car. : er rd.!c!n. ci 5 c n t

fr tr cI05e

FAMOUS "WITS" OF HISTORY Little Stories of Men and Women Whose Sayings Are Still Remembered By MXRK STUYVESANT

I-..-

health. T.V-r's many diff .rent kinds! reefed tu-einrs man. I-:! him pit a ' conventional things at the ago

diversions, t have f

Alrr.o.n anything e

is a diversion

air o' car.v.as slioes

shirt.

do

it; a

Cv KC

sometiiin apart an remote from th o m ftr Lowim

full o"

. 1 :

5. . Th'

di-

-() many

business

the y ' ro i r. 1 L-; e r. s. 1. .

eizars an

r"- r -. t in ' 1 '. ,- men makt is

Th'

Wry few persons start to do un-

of

cr.e. uut xjor.arnan w:::, accounted a ir.or. g the- grtate-t yatir:ts the world has ovtr known, .--tinted out

will thir.kin'

a rut! feller that makes hims-lf indispen.-

TEACHLXG THROUGH THE EYE. Have you ever stopped to consider what proportion of nil knowledge Is received through the sense of t dght? Have you fvAr s'opped to consider the thing that malte s thf deepest Impression upon the mind, that cling.s- rtrongost in niemorj'It is something that you have seen. The mind H ma'h up of pictures. It reaches its decisions through tho in"1 pre-s.'ior.s m-ide by tho things you see er are able to imagine. Education has been Impeded by the fact that much of the teaching in the past has not tdlmulated tho ser?e of imagination or left a deep Impression upon tho rniiid. The tohohir who I.s taught geography learns, for instance, that Cuba Is a tropical Island, that it produce.s sugar, various fruits, Is deno with vegitation. Tho school boy rr girl of twentv years ago when called upon to rec,''i, did not. think of the growing tugar cane, tho ripening fruits, tho dense undergrowth, but tried to remembor tho words which were printed In tho text books. Tho boy and grl who learned th history and meaning of the flag crammed their mind.s with words. They did not see Betpy Pcss, as she sewed ita stripea and stars. They did not e the saluting soldiery nor the citizen who doffs his hat. That Is being changed now and changed rapidly, as is evidenced by the announcement, printed today, that thid fctate lias a million feet of films, on which are pictured the real facts. The boy and girl no longer has to translate the written word into facts or pictures for himself. Ho gains tho facts through seeing actual sugar filds, historical characters, plant and vegetable life. In all their phase. In the vocation pchools the use of tools Is taught by the pictures of the manner In which tools may be used. There Is scarcely a brand of eclenco or the ordi nary branches In which this new education is not forcing its way by its short cut to knowledge and the deeper and more lasting impression upon the human mind. The ubo of thes films stimulates the Imagination of tho young. It gives the r?al facts, not words. It leavefi an impression that remains instead of cloggglng the thought processes with meaningless and dry formulas. That million-foot library of educational films now owned by tho state Is but tho beginning of a great movement to make use of what started a. a plaything. Some day, when educational methods are developed, all boya and girl of twelve will equal in knowledgo the college graduate of a dozen years beyond that age. Tho mind will hold real knowledge, workable knowledge, farts which mean something.

GOLD HANDCUFFS. "Would you contribute ."0 cents to a sure-fire scheme for wiping out the national debt for your descendants? All right, suppose every one in America chips in DO cents. That would give a fund of about $54,000,C0f not much In these days when government spenders think in terms of billions. 'r Pt congress pet aside ö 1.0C0,An0. Put it out at eight percent interest. In SO das. it would hao guv n to more than $'J.",000,nOO,ooO, enough to wipe out tho national dM ar.d le-ive several billions in the bank for our great -greatgrandchildren. At four percent intercut, it would tike about 150 year?. Money doubles In 17 years 245 das at four percent compound Interest, and In nine years two days at eight percent. This scheme wllll interest Henry Kord. Ha could change his will, set asido $5 4,000.00 p. a trust fund, and in $0 years have $25,000,(no.ooo as a gift to tax-ridden Americans. The scheme, whloh is sample and workable, does not corao from "Wall Street bankers. It is advancod by a village business man W. B. Kendall, of Bowdolnham, Me. Kendall recently took up a collection of JjEO among his neighbors. Eighty years from now, interest will have swollen this net-egg to $30,000. In the year 002, that should be enough to buy a couple cf dozen eggs or send a ton of freight half a. mile. Kendall's scheme so sensible that probably nothing ever will come of It. It should drive home, though, to every A norican. the tremendous power of compound interest to create great fertum?. The prominent Americans who are ?s rich as i hoc. lato e.ako have wlsened to the psychology of "shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves" In three generations the dissipation of great family estate by a couple cf generations of heirs. Having wd.se nod, they ar sewing up their money In trust funds. In many cases, th heirs get only n part of the interest. The dead hard ef th fcrtuno builder rcrodie, n-t from tho trr.ivo and continues piiing up nor" we.ilth. Kendall, of Mair.e, sdmws how compound Inter, st can tnve'I $ .".0,0 ftf,ooo to J 25,000, 000, 0C0 in SO years. Paus-, for a moment, to reflect what some of the huge fortunes of 1022 w-.U total SO years hence if the trust-fund-for-helrs idea goes on indefinitely. o If the movies say they will pay Will Hays only J10C.0C0 h? must make a mighty small salarv.

m:y. (Spokane Press.) James J. Parry of Uoston. Is marketing his unique Invention, a machine that strips the skin from f-sh and removes all the bones. The Parry contraption Is about the size of a washir-g machine. It handles 25, COO pounds of fish a day. Twenty-two workers are out of Jobs wherever a Parry machine i3 installed. They are released for other productive work. Each machine like thi saves labor and in the long run raies the standard of living by providing an ever-increasing ar icty pf commodities for general u-e.

daily grind. Pathin' may be a version fer lorne, while work

::en ntt tome re liers out o

zA ' loossn up joints they never islblo might Jest as well go t prison kr.owt-d they had. It's no ur.com-'fer life. Let him organize his buslmon thing fer a feller that's been! r.ess so that he or any one connected

housed up at pome arduous task all; with It kin drop out ar.time, not,

li'tore ho- was cn year old in a most unconventional way.

S-Alft was born in Dublin.

was three year

0

hand until h

Ar.d when he returned sr. was a

tor.ished to find that he cculd real

ro-cb.out th

nb vc rif rr

b,aiu? the op; ortu: ir.q r.he famous -a them5Ivs g-e-trly In trav , th.r

! O .-' IV - -

was cb lie ; to. s - p hospitable l.o ;. tiful was so del: ;'.

Ar-

P.-

- such a

Swifts turn of mind perhap

to this curious early incident was always toward the unusaal, epecl-

l nliy If there was a game or a Jok" t the ! involved. He often itsed this c-

" n :a

day f play poker in a close, smoky J only t' die, but t' bowl or d anth!n'

divertin'. A felier had fer bet:-

room all ni?hi. That's his diversion Vhiio it's not as healthy an' lr.cx

1 r

off hi3 bt-cohio a trusty an

ago of one year ho took a trip to j trr.ordir.ary traveling episode of his., England witdout his mother's know-j infancy to make people believe that

ledge or consent

It. It happened in this war:

His r.urse, who was devoted to him, w.; obliged to po to Pr.irlar.d

t prison fer life t

'in . 1 4

become indis

. on

account

U In

pensive as takin' a long walk lr.t' th ptnsiLdo. as he has some chance

countn. it takes his mind

lathe or wif

held down by

git t' bowl v

Tilfor-1 .Moots

. . V. - 11.. . J a

: th-- baby and

But it wasn't his j he had been born in England.

When a young man. Swift steppe i at an inn called Tho Three Cresses"

for dinner. The inn'keeper's

:efs in her family, j was very much occupied with, ou-

So f.ui I wns -die of'tomcrs who were more regul.i

'c

:o nO's iry to his i there fore.

Th.

we lfare did ühe consider herself, that ( Swi

or w:te or whatever he s been casionallv. Mrs

In' brother had been a thick, grouchv, -ne surrc ptinous.y smugep.a tno ooy th' puffv, stolid business man fer thirty away with her to Prolan!.

of vears when ho took up lowdin. IP'd ' IIis r-othsrs fear and worry was , t

It's h'rhlv evh'l.-iratin' I rrvfr seen a circus oe-rado. ho dlan' v-'- nlg.l lieari ürcwiits, out sne

soon Iearncc; wnere ana now ne hat

mere profitable ftiture author of

ar. 1.

than C, ulli-

vcr's Travehs" became very impatitut, and decided to p'.ay a joke on

le landlady. Locking up. he espied tho f-'.zn c

the

n, '"Tho Three Crose,

w

a pop'lar diversion, an' wluro windows are up an' th' clears

fair quality

an' rxcitin'. liven if von drnn a S-lkrow who (Garfield wuz. he'd never

an' he'd nc-cr ' va:i:.,;ica. yet, motner iiko. sne ae-tir.reo crosses u:an unuer im. : :

tenng.

Taking a diamond out

i pocket, he wrote on every wir.de i cf the landlord's "best room":

pound ball on your toe it's a diver-! looked at an ankle,

tion. (oin around on a crutch is had a croquet mallet in hi

r. change from th' usual, monotonous wp.y o' gittin about. Havin your friends stop you t' Inquire: about your Injury makes you ferglt all th mean aggravatin' things attendant on makin' a livin. Take th stuffy. Irritable business man, especially in these abnormal times, settln in hi" efflco day In an' day out waltln' fer busins.-. In th ovenin' ho goes

home takln' Iiis business worries th next tlmo."

hand. ' Cobed on tha best plan tor her boy.

Th' first timo he went off th alle lie Un account o: nis itf.u.u age ar.ci trie forgot all about busdr.es?. After Tiisp"ry rough trip across the Irish ea. first strike he spoke V people on th' j allowed him to remain in Pngstreet, an' oecasiomillv he wuz I at-; j oittln' f business. Af.-r h- bowled i I I i.. i . . . 1 I t .1 ' '

e:gniy-six Jie w;s a. i.iun.ar ngur--; n

on th' streets. T'day, whe:i ho liain't i absolutely no-ot-Hsarily afendiu' t' j some little detail of his bu-dncts. he's j talkln about what he's ?oin" to du i

o v ry

would '.:k-qu-.-'de n aft- "'";'. r o . ':o. "Will ;

.-o. .:- i r-. "Win :-cu "No. th :I. "W:l; you Swift in"Any pie. At th h :?rvi II:-::: r-a one- c h a t : -In t h '. . . : her la d- sl ip "The a.Jep.t ar.d Where: P" Swift's fae.

Ii I ve lo.-

h'.s

Y

fear, and 1 -Ol

T.

Pn-rland.

ta :

tax

WINIFRED BLAC

W

OMDN are changing all the time,' vays Clara Shortridge Foltz of California.

"Women have not changed since the Civil war," says Dr. Pay Lyman Wilbur, president of Stanford unisity also of California. Thus starts again the age-old discussion. Women are vain, women are frivolous, women arc cold, women are capricious, women are mercenary, women are selfish, women are heartless, women arc insincere, women are cowardly, women are cruel, women are Inconsistent, women are illogical, women are frail, women aro weak, womn are Hutterers, women are treacherous dear me, what a lot of things women are and always have been. How about the men why doesn't somebody rise up and make a few ringing remarks about them? Men arc selfish, men are conceitec!, men are egotistical, men are vain, men are trlflers, men aro inconsistent, men are illogical, men are impatient, men are careless, men are self-indulgent, men nre extravagant, men Tire stupid, men .arc

coarse, men aro cruel, men are stubborn, men are blundering, men are lacking in tact, men aro greedy, men are sensual, men are sclf-wdll-ed, men are srlf-contro'.ed Thero now! How's that for a list for the men? And very word of It Is true, b sure of that. Just as true as every word of the charges against women Is true. Men are always called the logical sex, and of all the illogical, inconsistent, unreasonable creatures on the face ef the earth, point mo out, I pray you. a good, husky, Iifesdzed man. Would a woman do everything in her power to make a fool of a man send him flowers, buy him candy, take him for motor rldo. tell him he's tho handsomest, cleverest, kindest, most brilliant, most fascinating ereaturo in tho world and then when he believed her and throwaway his common sense nnd his st-If-respoet for hor ravP would sh liurrh at him nnd tell other women that ho was n- srond on earth?

Ar.d if sho

logical or

beautiful or whether you aro clever; be good, and then I will respect you and take care of yo i and give j

you my name to weir." Put in tho meantime, if he can persuade her not to bo good ah, that's different. He does i't ofunt everything is all right when he's the man. I once heard a won an of the world giving a little niece of hers some advice.

to

'My dear," sho sail, "you've got look after yourself, row. And I i

have ju.-t one thing to tell you Kverv man in thrt worM will pro

tect you against every thing in the . world, but himself you'll have to ; li'-iht him from the start to tho fin- J ish." ! I wonder if there wasn't a rrood 1 11 . . il ? l x . .... I

urai oi u um in w nau me woman of the world said. Vanity? That's supposed to be a particularly feminine attribute, but oh, my sisters, if there ever was a woman as vain as a vain mm, protect me from tho siht of her! The ugliest, shabbiest, olcPst man in the world will follow tho prettiest, most distinguished girl and try to attract her attention, without the faintest idea of the way she feels when she looks at him. And tell me, brethren and slstern. how many old ladies of 6 0 do you know who would believe that a srood-looking, rich chap of 25 would be apt to fall desperately In love with one of them? Xo, ne when it dunes to want of logic and conceit wo wdll have to give the palm to man. Self-indulgenco ? Did you ever notice an otlieo full of men how they're always smoking or chewing or going to get a drink of wafer or looking at clock to see if it isn't time for something to eat? Yes, I think we could make out quite a case if we really wanted to start In and arraign the men at the bar of justice. Put after all. who wants to? YhatV tho v. so? They'd never admit a word cf it, anyhow. And what would we do without them? Ami what sort of a world

would it he jf jt v:;i all made over i

p..'! OP,

i did. should wo call her t-as and illogical? ; ycn .iro

4 111'" 11.', I I T . I . , J ' 1 . I . J'l 4 J J I '.1 I

with nothing but afternoon

massage- parlors In it? met" and women are worn-

i' :(H fe.V.. Mi. gic?

v v en m aavi

'--

nice

of the robin

w

ELL in advance of the robin, comes the new and fascinating

Spring Millinery. All the beautiful French pastel shade-- for

street and general sport wear. Every model indicates new developments and vital transformations.

Come in and try on your new spring chapcaux.

To pror.d." cays the man to the en. They're, both humanand I for woTi-ian "no matter whether you're one am pkol of it.

Sk PuMle Puls q

3

why I'M rori nrA i:itiiK;ii. Editor News-Timer: Without the primary election law, women voters would be at an almost hopcl.s-s? disadvantage in the exercise of their newly acquired franchise. It would have taken them a generation to become any match for tho experienced politicians who o long manipulated the old caucus and con

vention system. And tho standard! cf political lifo would have been on i the old-timo plane of und rrhanded-! ros.s and trickery. It w as in tho i days of tho caucus and the caucus-!

framed convention that the phr.ise "dirty pool of polities' bcamo cur-

bill lapidly developed into our federal pure food iaY3. Peveridgo is not now, and never has been a "rubber-stamp statesman." 1 believe in tho policies that ho has fought for, ar.d I believo hat he can be trurtcd to do the right thing in the senate, ani to do it in the right way; and to do it better than any other Indiana man or woman can do It. Therefore I am for Peveridge for Senator. MPS. W. E. MILLHIt.

I

The primary election law did not

suit tho cld-5tylo polifcians of

ithor party. liven tlu-n our democratic corgrc: sutan. who v. us supposed to bo "a friend of the people," joined the vast majority of th-. republican nld-?;mers in a campaign of education to discredit the primary law. The conspiracy for such it amounted to. when its plans and purposes nro considered was about to succeed. The friend" of the

I!

piimnry lacked le aders'.i ip. ar.'

w.-r-- il.y-oura a .1 and wc-il-nih e'.is-j heartened. There was ev-ry ind'-j cation that tho dayj oftho rotten i caucus were, to be re-enacted.

1 do not think it is any exaggeration of the plain facts to say that if Albert J. Peveridgo had rot, In that time of dire necessity, dropped his private interesdJ and plunge -t into the fray, and fought for the right of the plain voters of the state of Indiana, to have a voice In &oy-i-mnu-nt, we would today t back in the mire of "the dirty pool of ;oktios" of the by-gjne days It was a i the time a mo-st unpopular move, according to all of the "wis" ones," both rejulbhean and democratic, fer they knew that their campaign to d's..edlt thprimary had had its intended effect upon the public mind. Put Albert J. Peveridgo was opposed by all of

the "wise on, s" when ho nnde Iiis;

historic f.-ht in tho senate for an efficient child-labor law, and for the federal meat inspection l.tw. It look the senate more than ten yeara to accept Peve ridge's policy toward child-labor, but his meat-inspection

i;PKIS APPEKCIATIO.V. Pdit&r News-Times: Please accept my sincere thanks and appreciation for your editorial in the tho January 10 isae on t lie Tvague cf Women Voten. I am a meir.bcr of the. Ion! league and know that tho league was organized to promote thr. ci'i-yt-jiship of women who were so new in tho ways of politics. Your editorial is correct In its c nt'.re ty. The South Bend ieiguo 1ns always been most fcrtunato in the Mipport obtained fron our lecal pape rr. Wo hopo to study nr.d become intelligent voters. I am a republican 1 ut .am heartily asiuam-.-d that any one i-i my party woIi seek to Inlluer.co votes in any ,ay or disapprove of any organization which uaj? primarily an educational body. The league has no Intention of forming an independent w omens' party and Is not in sympathy wdth women who do. Our aim Is to improve tho pariics vrhich we already have. I am g'.ad that the move N bipartisan on 1. proves how effectually we have b-:en able to r:ake our own decisions. Ethel h. iru:.rMEru

Iii fkJ0M the Si&n of the Cb c!i

If .Ulli . I ' .t l ' -IV Uli HI Vi'Hil.l' I'

Jl r:iA

mmir Flit vifjim

w m i m , i I'lt- it, ) r m t. w

ilk'Jj. t'i':.' 1 -if d

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II. pH

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. a (. I, .-

"To thine own s"

as nicht the

be false to a try mar..'

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:ro.it rr-tnn

c;opo

Every man has a

to himself and to those who !

upon him for support. In erc!or to : u -cccd. to guard against olci ae, to f-:-fill obligations and to protect tho future comfort of your dopeneient, 'oti Must Save. The fairest and squ?rcst thin:: yr,u will ever do for yourself ar.d for yon-r loved ones will be found in the .'."t r f opening a savings account. Rt.ic -th.13 : When you are truo to yr;urf, if you will be true to others.

Come in and start a Saving Accou today.

r.t

To the Editor of The News-Times: There 1 a shoe store on V. Washington st which has fin ally arrived at the very zero in advertising. In my opinion and thit of tde other poopie who have occasion to pass by or be employed in the vicinity of this establishment. This shoe store's method of advertising Is a continuous shouting all day long through a megaphone, to attract attention to the store. If the megaphone plan

AM

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COMPANY

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