The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 September 1920 — Page 7
f lndiana! : JI STATE NEWS : •1 !• •••••••«•••••••••••••••••• Versailles. —Sidney Thatcher, age thirty-five, accused of the murder of his brother, Floyd Thatcher, and also alleged to have set fire to three barns in Ohio county, was arrested at Milan. Anderson. —Alexandria was chosen for the next national convention of Kappa Alpha Phi fraternity. George Jeffrey of Newcastle was elected president and E. Orchard of Bloomington secretary. Noblesville.—The eighteenth annual reunion of the Indiana Rural Letter carriers’ association will be held at Peru September 4, 5 and 6, according to an announcement ■ which has been made by officers of the organization. Fort Way»e.-—At the annual convention of the Indiana State Association of Master House Painters and Decorators, at. Rome City, the following officers were elected for the coming year: President, Frank Johnson, Indianapolis; first vice president, Frank Hollopeter, Peru. Decatur.—To weigh 45 pounds at the age of one year is the distinction of the son of Mr. and Mrs. Tony Meyers of Decatur. The baby weighed 15 pounds at liirth, add he is believed to be the largest healthy baby In the state. The parents of the boy are both small, each being less than five and one-half feet talk \ Indianapolis.—The Marion county budget, which has been drawn up by - the county auditor, frdni the estimates made by county ofi'ufials and institutions. shows that an ranediture of sl,606,8'12.50 is contemplated in the year 1921 for the maintenance of county government and institutions, an increase of $188,129 over the county maintenance costs for the year 1920. Evansville. —/kt the closing session, of the ninth annual convention of the Indiana State Building Trades council at Evansville Charles Kern of Indianapolis, who* has been first vice president of the /organization for the last year, was. elected- president. He debated Ray F. Abbott of Gary, who was up sos re-election. The vote was 46 to 42. “ ' South- Bend.—Governor Goodrich stood speechless in water up to his chest, waving his cane at Richard Lieber, director of the state department of conservation ; Rodney Fleming. deputy, and several deputy game wardens on the bank of a pond at the state fish hatchery nelar Lake Wawasee. The governor was surprised. A moment before he had tumbled into the'pond as he attempted to hand a |frog to a large bass in the pond. Crawfordsville. — Robbers obtained $6,000 in checks, stock, bonds and notes from the safe of thfe Myers Brthers grain elevator at Linnsburg, Montgomery The roldiery was the largest in Montgomery county in many months. The valuable papers stolen included about $1,200 in stocks and bonds; $4,000 in notes; $750 in checks. Ip addition about S6O in money was taken. The doors to the safe were unlocked by the yeggmen. Fort Wayne.—Serving as pallbearer twice for the same person, although the.funerals were almost 4,000 miles apart, was the experience of John Bengs of Fort Wayne, a veteran of the world war. When Leslie Kayser, member of Battery D, One Hundred and Fiftieth field artillery, died in France, Bengs assisted in lowering the body in the grave. The body was returned to the United States for burial, and at the funeral Bengs again served as a pallbearer. . Washington.—The city of Washington advanced from a fifth to a fourth class city without increasing the. expenses of ’ the city government. S. L. McPherson, mayor of W ashington; members of the council, and other city officials, who could have voted increases in their respective salaries by reason of the change in classification, refused to do so, saying the city’s finances will hot permit increases. The salaries of all city officials, therefore, will remain the same as they were when Washington was a fifth class city. Indianapolis.—The state board of tax commissioners at its fourth session, which is to begin September 20, probably will make only a few slight changes in the state tax levies, Fred A. Sims, chairman of the board, said. Mr Sims said the of the total state valuation from approximately $5,780,000,000 in 1919 fiosdibly slightly more than iu 1920 will provide normal increases in funds for the state levies. Thd total lof the state levies is 18 cents on each( SIOO of assessed valuation. k Of that' total 3.9 cents is fbr the state high-/ iway commission; 2.8 for the state edul jcatlonal institutions, and 2 for vocaA tional education. Those three levies! (Will be unchanged, Mr. Sims said. The remaining levies —2 cents for the state general fund, 3.9 for the benevolent Institutions, and 5.2 for the state tuition fund—may be slightly increased, fee said. i Indianapolis.—The state highway Icommission added three roads to the Btate highway, system, on approval of Governor Goodrich. One is known as "Adeway” and runs from Kentland to Hammond. Another is Jackson highway from Wolcott tp Montmorenci, end the third is the Brookville road, running from Indianapolis through [Rushville to Brookville. V Gary.—Two bandits held up L. P. Bwoverland, ticket agent at the Michigan Central depot at Gary, and escaped with a batch of tickets. The bandits were unmasked. City—J. E. Jester, age pbrty-five, of Sweetser, who has been fc mall clerk on the Logansport-Brad-ford division of the Pennsylvania Railtoad company for the last 39 years, rias retired on a pension of $729;"v ‘ Indianapolis. —Pear and peach bar* vesting In Indiana is on in full blast now with’ good yields, says George C. pryant, field agent for the co-operative Eiportlqg. seryice. en.—Farmers In the Goshen report serious loss resulting from frosts. All lowlands are affect- ■ .. ■ i'.t 1 ■ ' . i .- '•
Indianapolis.—Establishment of a I school for training recreation workers ' for playgrounds and community cen- , ters was approved by the Indianapolis ’ board of park commissioners.« ' Indianapolis.—The annual meeting ' of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology will be held at 1 Indianapolis September 16 to 18. Thft ■ meeting will be addressed by a number ' of prominent jurists and socialists. 1 Indianapolis.—T. N. Taylor of Terre Haute will be the successor of Charles ‘ Fox as president of the Indiana State ■ Federation of Labor. The resignation ? of. Mr. Fox from the presidency of the state federation resulted from his ap--1 pointment as a member of the state industrial board. ‘ Vincennes.—Rev. J. W. Settle of Washington was elected superintendent of the Indiana conference of the United Brethren church at the ninetysecond annual session held at Vincennes. This is the fourth consecutive year this honor has been conferred on the Washington minister. Henryville.—A large barn belonging to Edgar Luek, about two miles southeast Os Henryville, was destroyed by fire. About 40 tons of hay, considerable wheat and oats, all farm machinery, harness and wagons were burned. : The loss is estimated at about $4,500, i It is presumed it was due to spontane- • ous combustion. I Indianapolis.—The arrest of approxI imately 300 Indianapolis automobile - owners for violating the state vehicle ! light law and that part of the city - traffic laws which governs the parking of machines outside the congested dis- ■ tricts, has failed to bring about a ma- ’ terial reduction in the number of vioi lations of this kind, it Is said at police ■ headquarters. Washington.—Plowing for wheat is in progress in all’ parts of Daviess county. The indications are that the ’ acreage will be large. The Daviess ’ corn crop is the> finest in years, and if a killing frost does not occtir before i. October 1, Daviess county fanners will s harvest what is expected to be the ■ biggest crop of corn in the history of ■ the county. - Elwood. —Oris H. Waymire, farm- ' er, residing northeast of Elwood,’ made • the largest shipment of stock from this • city that has left Madison county at 1 any single time in yars. Five cars consigned to Chicago' contained fat i steers and seven loads of hogs were i shipped to Buffalo and Indianapolis I markets. The stock was bought last winter and fed on the Waymire farm. ■ The shipment is expected to bring S4O,- ■ 000. ■ Indianapolis.—Coal operators have begun sending to the state coal and food commission applications for reg1 istration and licenses as required by the coal-price regulation enacted by the last special session of the legislature. Soon after the law became effective the commission sent out approximately 2,000 application blanks to retail, coal dealers and to operators. Until recbtttlj7‘lfbw'dVer, f£w Operators ’ filled in the blanks and returned them. Petersburg.—Corn is in the best condition ever known in Pike county, and under favorable weather conditions the greatest crop in the history of the county will be harvested. Wheat ground is being prepared under favorable weather conditions, and some planting will take place in September. The acreage in northern Pike county will be greater than the acreage planted last year, but in some parts of the county the acreage- will be materially decreased. Indianapolis.—Carl Mote, secretary of the Indiana public service commission, was summoned to appear in the Lake Superior court September 14 to defend the , commission’s action in granting the Hammond, Whiting & East Chicago Street Railway company an 8-cent fare. He will he asked to show cause why the commission’s fare ruling should not be set aside in injunction proceedings brought by •the city of Whiting against the railway company to prevent collection of the increased fare. Vincennes. —Arrangements are being completed for the Indiana conference of the Methodist Episcopal chufch, to be held in Vincennes SeptembeW4 to 20. More than 400 visiting ministers and as many laymen are expected to attend. The laymen’s conference will be held in connection with the regular conference. The Indiana conference district is composed of all of the state south of a line between Terre Haute and Indianapolis, and has about 400 ministers and 1,200 churches, with a membership of IJO.OOO. Terre Haute—Danger of an extended tieup of Indiana mines apparently was past following an agreement reached by the joint wage scale committees of the Indiana Bituminous association and United ’Mine Workers of District No. 11. The new fecale, which is retroactive to August 16, provides for an increase of 25 per cent to inside men and boys and $1.50 a day to “day” men. Other concessions were granted the miners. Immediately following the agreement telegrams were sent to all locals advising the men a wage scale had been agreed upon and directing them to return to work. Washington, D. C.—According to Indiana coal mine statistics compiled by the federal trade commission and made public here, the average margin of profit for a ton of Brazil block coal, 43 operators reporting, was 45 cents for May this year. For the year 1918 it was 47 cents. The 43 operators reporting realized $3.06 a ton for the coal in May this year, and $2.33 a ton for the year 1918. Richmond.—Charles Hoover, a federal prohibition enforcement officefl was fined $1 and costs in city court at Richmond on a charge of intoxication. Indianapolis.—County school superintendents who favor the county unit system of public school control have encountered an obstacle to carrying on the campaign for legislation to set "up. the system, It Is said. Some township trustees, whose offices practically would be abolished by’ the system, at least so far as school control by trustees obtains, are reported to be opposing the county unit proposal. Wabash. — Farmers from various parts of the county said heavy damage had been done growing crpps by frosts.
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
: PROBLEMS FACING : STRICKEN WORLD l ■ t i Shall Chaos or Reconstruction r in Europe Follow the Great World War? j ‘ DAWN OF THE “NEW ORDER” 3 3 Relations Between Employer and Employee, Based on Sound Human Ethics, Replacing Doctrine of ’ Vorce, Is the Only Hope. : Article XXXIII. By FRANK COMERFORD. The “New Order” is coming. The ; world must prepare for it. The peo- - pie demand it. Those who oppose any ? "change” must surrender to the ma- . jority. America should be the first - country to recognize the need of a , “change.” The building of the “New i. Order” should be done with the heads - and by the hands of all classes. Collective bargaining and profit sharing will be part of the “New Ore der.” If the business men of America e do not co-operate to bring about coly lectlve bargaining and profit sharing, S the people will resort to force. f- Charles M. Schwab, chairman of the - board of directors of the Bethlehem >- Steel corporation, is a captain of ine dustry with vision. He is a forward- . looking American. He believes that s the basis of big business must be s gounded on sound human ethics. The e other day he hit the nail on the head s when he said : f "What the working men want is e recognition, appreciation and fellow--1 ship. It is the duty of every business e man in the United States to see io it f that the largest possible opportunity for employment is given the greatest - number of men. e “Through personal relationships 8 and the ‘tone 1 of the business estabt fished on these principles, the rank s find file of men will come to know the t spirit of tlie management and there e will be no question of the loyalty of s the men to the management. t “The kind of collective bargaining l - that I believe in is the one that recog- ■ nlzes the right of the men themselves to choose their own fellow workmen e as representatives to speak with the 1 company and which believes in the - obligation of the companw to treat F these representatives individually and e collectively with the confidence and s. respect to which they are justly en- • titled.” The working men must not be made 1 the slaves of business, they must be ■ made part of it. Political freedom, 1 liberty under the law, are robbed of their meaning if men are enslaved by - their work. It is not enough to make 1 a man free before the law, he must 9 he safe and free in his work. There 9 is a difference between political freet dom and industrial freedom. Men are • entitled to both forms of freedom. 9 One thought is uppermost and almost • universal in the minds of the work--7 ing men of the world, and that is that • they have not had a square deal. I 9 agree with them. The evidence sups porting their thought is overwhelming. Men who give their lives to work F have a positive right to a voice in the • management of the business. This 9 right must be recognized. Working 3 men know that until they are given 1 a voice their Interests will be without ' a spokesman and as a consequence F will be neglected. It isn’t a question 3 only of wages or hours of employ--9 ment; the matter goes deeper. ’Men • want the pleasure and satisfaction of 3 being part of the business. They have 7 been only part of the business in the 9 sense that they sweat for it and give their lives to it. Partnership Is the Solution. ' Labor and Capital should be a part- ( nership. The two are like the blades ( of a scissors; separate and apart they > are meaningless and valueless. Joined together, functioning harmoniously, ' they are useful and necessary to the world. This partnership idea must be . put into practice. The product of . the ’ partnership must be more fairly divided. There is no gainsaying the fact that distribution has been entirely in the hands of the employers, and they have been selfish, and the workers have suffered. As President Masayrik put it to me one day: “Here we have a pile of gold and a few ! people in possession of it, wasting it to their own injury and to the detrii ment of the world, while over here we have the maily' living in wretchedness and fear.” Everywhere in Europe I found progressive public men and for-ward-looking men of big business admitting that the working man has not had a square deal. There was a day in the world when usury was not considered a social or legal crime. Money-lenders insisted they had a right to loan their money at any rate of interest the borrower was willing to pay. They justified taking advantage of the borrower’s necessity by arguing it was part of the right of private contract. When some saner minds urged that the state had an interest, that the public welfare was affected by the lender exacting the last pound of flesh, a great cry went up that the sacred right of private contract was being invaded; that the liberty of man’s relation with man was being violated. Yet the laws against usury came, and they have remained. These laws insist *hat a lender shall be limited in the
AVERAGE LIFE, THIRTY THREE. Good authorities give the average duration of human life as about thirtythree years. One quarter of the people on the earth die before the age of six, one-half before the age of sixteen, and only about one person of each one hundred born lives to the age of sixty-five. The deaths are calculated at sixty-sev-en a minute, 97,790 a day and 35,639,885 a year. Births are calculated at about seventy a minute, 100,800 a day and 86,792,000 a year.
•mount he recelvet at Interest on his loans. Today everyone concedes the morality, the humanity and the justice of the usury laws. Public Welfare at Stake. Men investing money, in business injure the public welfare when they profiteer. We calf it robbing the consumer. How much greater the larceny when the excess profits come from the sweat of the producers! Business should be honestly organized. The capital stock of the corporation should repesent money actually invested. The investors fire entitled to a reasonable interest on their investments, to an insurance against the “rainy day.” They are entitled to set aside a percentage of the earnings to replace the capital invested. After this is done the balance belongs to the workers. Into the business they have put their lives; out of the business they should get more than a living. Their lives are lived in their they have a right to a say in their own lives. No one that I have met has the plans and specifications for the “New Order,” but everyone has in mind the general outline.. The government, the working men and the employers should co-operate ip making the plan, in building the “Tomorrow.” A step in the right direction is the Industrial conference recently called by the president. In the preliminary statement of this conference, we find much cause for hope. They have presented a plan looking to the settlement of industrial disputes by arbitration. The plan is tentative in form, the framework for the completed structure. It contemplates the establishment of a national industrial court of nine members, located in Washington, with the, functions of a court of appeals, to determine disputes referred to it. The countrysis divided into regions, with regionpl boards- of inquiry and adjustment, to which may be submitted controversies between employers and employees for settlement. The chairiissn of these disputants will have equal representation on the board. Tp insure confidence in the boards the members are to be picked from panels of employers and employees submitted by the secretary of commerce and the secretary of labor, similar to jury panels prepared for the courts. Ea>-h s <ie shall be entitled to a .specific number of challenges, and tbe Ten!i •> of tbe industrial juries must be by unanimous vote. For the Justice of Right. It is not computeery arbitration. It is a plan by which employers and employees may settle their differ.-; . cn merit rather than by force. It has an advantage over the settlement of industrial disputes; by the strike, in that production will not be stopped, class hate will not be developed. The justice of right rather than the force of might will puestions. This machinery will give public opinion a chance to act intelligentlt and effectively. An interesting paragraph reads: “Whenever an agrecnient is reached by the parties to a dispute, or a determination is announced by a regional board of adjustment, or by an umpire, or by the national industrial tribunal, the agreement shall have the full force .and effect of a trade agreement which the parties to the dispute are bound to carry out.” We are facing the east. The new day is breaking. A better understanding between employers and employees is in sight. Let no one stand in the way of compromise and concession. * To avoid entangling alliances It is not necessary to abandon Europe. To put an end to war, some open agreement of nations is necessary. Secret treaties must cease; the new internationalism must be a covenant insuring the democracy of the world. America’s place is in the vanguard of the movement toward the “New Order.” We are a world power; we cannot escape our place and our responsibility in the family of nations. I am sure we do not want to. Out foreign policy is “America for Americans and AU for Humanity.” The creed of our house is “Man Is His Brother's Keeper.” (Copyright, 1920. Western Newspaper Uaion) The Real London. English air, working upon London smoke, creates the real London. The real London is not of uniform brightness, like Paris, ... it is a picture continually changing, a continual sequence of pictures, and there is nc knowing what mean street corner may not suddenly take on a glory not its own. The English mist is always at work like a subtle painter, and London is a vast canvas prepared for the mist to work on. The especial beauty of London is the Thames, and the Thames is so wonderful because the mist is always changing its shapes and colors, always making its lights mysterious, and building palaces oi cloud out of mere parliament houses with thir jags and turrets. When the mist collaborates with night and rain the masterpiece is created.—Arthux Symons. Unsafe to Walk on Lava. The temptation to walk on the thin crust over hot lava seems to be almost as strong as the longing which little boys feel for trying new ice. “Two young ladies,” reports the Hilo Tribune, “stepped into a volcano crevice and were rescued somewhat bruised. Greater care is necessary in rambling through the Kilauea crater. Another Hilo lady was visiting the crater after nightfall with a party of friends and walking along a safe trail she suddenly sank up to her armpits in a crack which opened beneath her feet”
MADAGASCAR GOLD, „ A curiosity preserved at the Philadelphia mint Is a small consignment of gold from Madagascar, which Is of an i extraordinary brightness. It was \ smelted and put up for shipment b| natives, who, for a receptacle, took a piece of bamboo six Inches long and two Inches In diameter, * polishing the outside to . glasslike smoothness. Then they put a wooden cork in one end, poured In the melted gold <nd corke< up the other end.
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A square deal always pays. Cuticura Soap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cuticura Soap daily and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum and you have the Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Adv. All news isn’t black as it’s printed. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTURIA. that famous old remedy for infants and children, an<j see that it In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria All that rises sets, and everything which grows decays.
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SAW SOLDIERS OF FIVE WARS John Pemberton Oak Has History Probably Unequaled by That of Any Other Tree. Soldiers of five wars have been druled beneath the John Pemberton oak tree, Bristol, Virginia-Tennessee, nominated for a place in the hall of fame of the American forestry association at Washington by Mrs. H. F. Lewis, secretary of Virginia for the Daughters of the American Revolution. Under this tree Col. John Pemberton mustered his troops for the battle of King’s Mountain. A marker has been placed on the tree by the Sycamore Shoals chapter, says the American Forestry Magazine, in making the announcement. The soldiers of the War of 1812 met here. Then came the Mexican war and the old tree saw men again leave their homes to fight Next came the struggle between the states, and the oak witnessed the drilling of men to fight one another in their own country. Then came the world wai; and again the veteran oak saw our boys answer their united country’s call. Animals Cause Asthma. Certain people are liable to attacks of asthma when brought into contact with cats, dogs, etc. This Is due to an emanation from the skin or fur of the animal.
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WOULD ALSO LIKE TO KNOW Problem Put Up to Private Kelly Was Something Over Which He H£d Been Pondering. Kelly had drawn a summary for being absent from post while on guard duty. “Where were you?” demanded the judge advocate, “when the sergeant of the guard passed just in front of your post?” “At the rear.” “Where were you when the corporal passed just behind it?” “At the front.” “And now,” triumphantly, “where were you when the sergeant and the corporal walked around your post from opposite directions without seeing you?” “Judge,” said Kelly hopefully, “that’s been worrying me. Where was I ?” —The American Legion Weekly. The Basement Was Vacant. “You say,” remarked a Brooklyn woman to a candidate for a job in her household, “that you were a month in your last place?” “Yes, mum,” was the response. "A week with the lady on the top floor, a week with the lady on the third floor, a week on the second and a week on the ground floor.” a Plain Talk. "Pa, what is a dirigible?” “Now, Willie, haven’t I told you not to irrigate your poor pa with your questions and prosecute him with your impositions just like he was a cyclorama of inflammation?” Making Hay. “Did the captain do anything to clean up the precinct?” “Some say he got sixty thousand In a month.’’—Louisville Courier-Journal.
A bad memory is the skeleton in the Jiur’s closet. •*CoId in the Head” Is an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh. Those subject to frequent "colds in the head” will find that the use of HAUL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will build up the System, cleanse the Blood and render them less liable to colds. Repeated attacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to Chronic Catarrh. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is ; taken Internally and acts through the J Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys- , tern, thus reducing the inflammation and i restoring normal conditions. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Big plans do not balance small performances. Roman Eye Balsam has gained the confidence during 75 years Manufactured i only by Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pill Co.. 372 Pearl St.. New York City.—Adv. 1 Humility is the foundation of all J virtue. i Many go forward bravely because they fear to go back.
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