VENTNOR NEWS Established 1907 508<510-512 N. Tennessee Ave. _ (Atlantic City, N. J.) Telephones, Marine 1890-91 Ventnor—6210 Ventnor Ave. (Ventnor City, N. JK) Telephone, Neptune 1090 Subscription Price..$1.00 Per Year Payable in Advance Single Copies..........Two Cents Editorial Staff CHARLES SCHEUER ARTHUR G. WALKER H. C. TEST CARL M. VOELKER_ LIONEL SCHEUER Business Manager P. COLLIS WILDMAN Circulation Manager On ssle st stands of the Union News Company in the Eastern District. -- /•Entered at eecond-claee matter July n, 1907. at the Poet Office at Atlantic City, New Jersey, under the Act of Con greve of March 2, 1879.” \ ^ This publication is tree and inde pendent. It iB not controlled by trust, creed, advertiser, political party, mil lionaire or anybody or anything except its own conscience. The Vbwtnob News has the largest circulation of any weekly newspaper pub lished in New Jersey. Emerson loved the good more than he abhorred evil. Carlyle abhorred evil more than he loved the good. If you should, by chance, find anything in this newspaper you do not especially like, it is not all wise to focus your memory on that, to the exclusion of all else. Bless my soul!—C. S. SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1923 i RESCRAMBLING RAILROAD EGGS ' Veptnor as well as every " other resort on Absecon Island > has live and active interest in the protest of President Agnew T. Dice of the Reading Railway against plain big stick methods being attempted to amalgamate that line with the Baltimore and Ohio system. To the greatest extent possible, the officials and prominent citizens of this resort should show their appreciation of past Reading favors in line of upbuilding transportation advance by voicing their protest in opposi tion to any move which will . take from the Reading the power to continue to give service, and to improve service, | to Atlantic City which means Ventnor. 4 The proposal to which objec . ? tion is raised by President Dice and other experts in railway transportation lines, is that roads now under separate v,' management shall be merged § Into a few great systems to be managed without opportu nity for that almost personal contact between the lines and p those they serve which has been a potent force in recent § travel and civic growth and ’ advancement. The idea is - advanced that by such consol P idation and centralization sav I ing would be made in operating and other costs, and that groups , of railways could be made more ? profitable than are present single lines. •ft; But a short time has passed since acrimonious battle was waged for securing of the very decentralization w'hich now exists. Political demagogues made capital out of their demands that every sort of railway combination be broken down and that the roads be forced to grow, or to fall, alone. In face of the wide diver gence in viewpoint of probable results, either the old or the new viewpoint must be absurd. For ourselves, and speaking with admitted selfish motive, we believe in the present system under which the men who direct the destinies of the railways which serve us shall remain not only to us known but to us civic, if not personal, friends. We feel that in ability to appeal to the men whom we know we are more likely to secure those railway advantages that we need than are we in event it becomes necessary to make our pleas to a man or men alien to our communities and more . than likely un interested in the very problems of transport which are to us the most important. It cost millions of dollars and great effort to unscramble certain railroad eggs after the riot of consolidation of a few /ears ago. Let us continue jnder the present policy which las proved so highly successful jefore we give the plan of big, inwieldy' and possibly—dan gerous policy of rescrambling he railways a new trial. A POWER FOR GOOD Several months ago, at a gathering of prominent men in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Godfrey Mahn, there was or ganized the Ventnor Club of Men. At that time the news papers and the persons not con nected with its formation gave the club but a cursory notice. However, in the short time that has elapsed this organization has gained a firm footing and is now demanding, by its pur pose and expansion, the interest of the entire community. A description of this club is a prediction of its future great ness. Men from every field of endeavor and prominent in the affairs of Ventnor are members or prospective members of this civic organization whose en rollment is confined to one hundred representative men of the community. Meetings are held once a week, not only in the wintertime, but in the summer as well. This means that these men, who by the sheer diversity of their in dustrious and political interests represent all Ventnor, will be able to exchange ideas for civic improvement. *~ The benefits or detriments to the different fields of en deavor that would result from the * adoption of any proposal being considered by the city will be explained by leaders in that particular line of work. Since these meetings are held once a week immediate expres sion on every timely subject affecting Ventnor is obtained. £ In*order*to gain even a more general expression of the people, public-spirited women are tc ' meet once a month in con junction with ,the club, and are to discuss with the men, questions as viewed from the feminine angle. j Furthermore, the conclu sions, as reached by the Vent nor Club of Men, will be more than verbal suggestions; they will be the advice of foremost citizens backed by the rep resentation of the whole com munity. What these men decide as the best policy or the best plan must be accepted as the views of Ventnor, and therefore, worthy of adoption. Tovjnsure the integrity of the organization and to keep its standards civic rather than political, and its aim for. the improvement of the city free from any exploitation of in dividual or party interests, there has been chosen a commit tee who pass on names for mem bershiponlyafterbeing satisfied that the prospective members are sincerely interested in the prosperity of Ventnor. With such a purpose, such procedure and such members, the Ventnor Club of Men is certain to be a power for good and uplift in this city. NEWS • , By Charles Scheuer When Curiosus lately ac costed the writer with the question, “What is the news?” :he writer made the usual reply, “Nothing.” The an swer is certainly as common: as the question, and it is singular that there should seem to be a universal and instinctive disposition in modern society to put a question which is generally received with so baf fling an answer. But Curiosus is not easily baffled, and he persisted in his inquiry, ex plaining, however, that he did not mean the current gossip of the moment, but generally what is news—or strictly— what is the news which justifies the name of the newspaper. “You mean to ask, then,’’ returned the writer, “what is the news which we may properly expect to learn from the morning paper?” - “Precisely Socrates,” said Curiosus. , The young friend has £sked the writer what the divines call a large question. But it is one which has been forcibly suggested by recent publica tions and comments in the press. Jf a newspaper is directly challenged to declare why it publishes certain things, its reply, ex officio, is that it is obliged to supply its readers with all the news, and that it is a reporter and not an inventor; consequently that it must -publish whatever hap pens, however disagreeable it may be. But this is a soph istry', like the other theory of many newspapers that correc tions of editorial statements must not be made. “Sir,” said an indignant man to Omniscentius, the editor, “your paper states that I have com mitted suicide by hanging my self. It is false, sir. I am not dead by hanging, and I demand a full and apologetic retraction of the calumny.” “My dear sir,” answered Omniscentius, the editor, “you must not demand impossibilities. The Tongue of Truth never retracts. But we will perhaps consent to state that you were cut down before life was wholly extinct.” The sophistry lies in this, that all that happens is not news, and that, if it were, no paper could publish it all, and ;onsequently that every paper must choose. Thus the whole category of crimes and ac cents includes innumerable incidents, that by the limita tions of space cannot be, and] by considerations of morality ought not to be, published, j Of all that occurs, therefore, j every newspaper must choose! what it will print; and then,] having chosen, it must decide how it will print it. The newspaper, therefore, has the whole responsibility, and can not throw it upon fate or the! necessity of the case. Fate does not compel it to print even a very small proportion of the incidents of a day, nor the necessity of the case force it to print what it selects in a way to demoralize the public mind. The newspaper may select any spot in a large city five hundred feet square, and while in every such space there occur every day andv night incidents whose mere publica tion would create an uproar, the newspaper does not publish them. It is prevented by two reasons: one is the law of the State; the other is the law of public propriety. / It is untrue, therefore, that a newspaper must publish whatever happens. It does not and it cannot. Con sequently it must choose from v BUM « " He’s a little dog with a stubby tail, and a moth-eaten coat of tan, And his legs are short, of the wabbly sort; I doubt if they ever ranf^ And he howls at night, while in broad daylight he Sleeps like a bloomin’ log, And he likes the feed of the gutter breed; he’s a most irregular dog. I call him Bum, and in total sum he’s all that his name implies, For he’s just a tramp with a highway stamp that culture cannot disguise; And his friends, I’ve found, in the street abound, be they urchins or doge or men; Yet he sticks to me with a fiendish glee. It is truly beyond my ken. I talk to mm when I’m lonesome-like, and I’m sure that he understands When he looks at me so attentively and gently licks my hands; Then he rubs his nose on my tailored clothes, but I never say aught thereat For the Good Lord knows I can buy more clothes, but upver a friend like that! So my good old pal, my irregular dog, my flea-bitten, stub-tailed friend, Has become a part of my very heart, to be cherished till lifetime's end-' And on Judgment Day, if I take the way that leads where the righteous meet If my dog is barred by the heavenly guard—we’ll both of us brave the heat’. V-vwv '.v-i- —Redmond Radtliff the vast mass of incident that which may be considered -to be of public importance. This includes what may be called general political information; facts In all the departments of ! human activity, and as illus I trative of the actual condition i of society, local crimes and 'casualties. This is all news, ! or incidents and facts in which the-general public is interested. But the manner in which all this shall be published, the proper proportion and detail of circumstance, is wholly at the discretion of the .news paper, and for this the news paper alone is justly accountable. The execution of a noted criminal, for instance, is a matter of news. But descrip tion of the execution is a matter of choice. If two or three columns be given to it, and every ghastly detail of the event be laid bare, it is plain that the object of the publica tion is not the conrtnunication of news, but the gratification of a morbid appetite and a demoralizing curiosity. * So the reports of crimes of various kinds are news; and the trials of criminals may be properly reported in detail, because in this way the public learns how the crimes were made possible, and how they may be baffled hereafter. But the publication of the details of trials of other criminals, whose crimes^ have no other public bearing than every violation of human and divine laws, and which pander only to the worst appetites and passions, is in itself a gross offense against the community. It is not the necessity of the case, and the duty of a news . \ ■ " .... • ■ . ■ ■ ■ .' / ' ‘ paper, and the condition of the enterprise, and the right of the public,- and the improvement of society; it is the choice of the newspaper to pander to foul tastes, because, for what ever reasons, it believes such pandering t6 be pecuniarily profitable. “The high mission of the press," and “the press a great engine of public morality,” and all similar phrases, do not conceal the disreputable fact. A newspaper which would pub lish such things as have been published, under the plea of exposing social classes and the hollowness of the fashionable world, would go further in the way, if it did not fear that it would be unprofitable, by caus ing the paper to fall into the hands of the law. Such a paper is in no sense a champion of public morals. It is a pander to immorality, and goes just as far as it dares to go with selfish regard to its own safety. Such a newspaper supplies a precise measure of its estimate of its readers. “This is what you like, ladies and gentlemen; fall to, then, in Heaven's name, and bon appetitV’ Curiosus will perhaps gather from these remarks that while a sudden insurrection and the dethronement of a foreign Prince is a matter of public news, the incidents of the interior life of his harem, if he have one, is not; and that if the Sultan is murdered in his seraglio, the newspaper which tells the news by an elaborate account of the private conduct of the Sultanas is not publish ing news, nor “discharging the often painful duty of a news purveyor.1’ _ -Need Protection ’v.. .. • If you have securities, such as bonds, ! stocks, mortgages or other valuables, v you should have the protection afforded by our Fire and Burglar , - Proof Vault. A Safe Deposit Box here costs only a small amount v, per year The Ventnor City National Bank Atlantic Ave. at Surrey Place V VENTNOR, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM A National Bank with a Savings Department