Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 August 1914 — Page 4

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The Terre Haute Tribune

A N A E E

An independent newspaper. Daily and -Sunday. The Terre Haute Gaiette, established 1869. The Terre Haute Trloune, established 1804.

Only newspaper in Terr* Haute h«T•lntf full day leaned wire service of Aa*oJiated Press. Central Press association service.

Telephone—Business Department, both Jphones, 378: Editorial Department, Clti15 teens, 155 Central Union, 316. f, In advance, yearly^ by mall, Dally t. »and Sunday, $5.00. r, prSSunday only, $2.00.

Daily only, $3.00.

Entered as second-

f% class matter January 1, "V? p0" I 1906, at the postoffice •f jat Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act congress of March 2, 1879.

4 Terre Haute newspaper for Terre Haute people. The only paper In Terre 5Haute owned, edited and published by Terre Hauteans.

Tke Association df Am ican Advertisers bos ex •mined! and c»rtifi«d to tha oircolation *f this pub­

lication. The fifivree of circulation ooatalneo in the Association's ro port only ore gurxanteed.^.

Association of Americas Advertisers

No. 13.3.1 WbntiuH Urff. N. T. City

MR. GULLEY.

Probably few members of the progressive party ever thought they .would see the day when a state contention would howl down the name of 1 Theodore Roosevelt, but that 1s what happened in the New York state con"i Mention of the progressive party yesterday. When the time arrived for the nominations for governor an effort was made to stampede the convention from

Davenport to Roosevelt, but the delegates shouted It down. The reason is plain enough. The party has no place for a "trimmer" and the majority of the delegates had reached the conclusion that Mr. Roosevelt recently has been inspired more by political expediency than by any consistent faith in the progressive party. How different the leader of the party in this district, Mr. Gulley, who spoke to Terre Haute and Fifth district progressives last night Mr. Gulley believes that the party stands for cerJ^tain principles which never can be compromised and believes that when the party starts plans for fusion with the stand pat organization, from which it divorced itself at Chicago, that that step will mark the decline of the progressive party. Too, considering the growth of the party In this state, the class of men It has attracted to its banner under the leadership of Albert J. Beveridge, he feels that no quarter need be asked from

Nny

party or set of politicians and

'Ihat the party will move on with its face set towards the principles which

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gave It birth. Mr. Roosevelt Is far afield from Mr. Gulley and the progressives of Indiana. The new found alliances sought by him in the NewYork republican and progressive conventions are, to say the least, a disappointment.

THE NEW HORROR OF WAR.

The New York Herald, speaking of the great city and its activities, admits that the shortage in hair dye will play the mischief with a number of important local industries-

The confidence man, the bunco steerer, the green goods agent, the sideshow barker and the unassuming gajm^ler will be lost and discredited without the time-honored blue-black mustache.

The bare-faced villian is largely a product of fiction and the film studio. His activities are confined for the most part to home-destroying and railroadwrecking- But the real villian of melodrama and gold bricks and green goods wears a Jet blaclc trademark and will And great difficulty In being recognized without It.

AFTER WAR, WHAT?

After numerous Interviews as to the causes and responsibility for the war, the New York Times says: "Abroad, the sudden excitement df the crisis has naturally aroused eager patriotism and as eager hostility. But proof is not wanting that the war was not started by national hostility ot racial antipathy. These things are the result ratjier than the cause of war. Six weeks ago Germany was one of the taost prosperous and enlightened of nations. During the last decades of peace she had developed scientific Industry, commerce, manufacture, learning and art, until she was the admiration of the cl(vllized world. Her scholars and teachers were found In every country. Her ships floated on every sea. Her men and women were leading in the internationalization of mankind. "Do they want war? Is It reasonable to suppose that the majority of such men and women wish deliberately to tear apart all this vast fabric that their skill and industry has woven in time of peace? Are we to Judge by the war madness that has swept over them at t\|e instigation of a few militarists? Can the German people rejoice at the stoppage of their commerce, the stifling of their scientific enterprise, the retarding of their development? As a matter of fact the spirit of the German people is peace-loving and sane and is aroused to fighting hostility only by a certain kind of education—the education given them by the imperial military policy, by conscription, by the maintenance of a huge army in Idleness, by mad competition In armament. A few militarists want the war the people do not want it. "The thing would be laughable, ridiculous if it were not so ghastly."

Public opinion is against the war. That is the one fact -which stands out

Joseph's Massed Shirt Sale

Commencing Tomorrow Morning

CHOICE OF TWO LOTS OF SHIRTS CHEAP

All Sizes but Not All Sizes of Every Kind

These are all good shirts from our own regular stock, but some are mussed from handling, display windows, etc. An unusual shirt offer. None sold till tomorrow morning. See west window.

Last Day of the Manhattan Shirt Sale

No Approvals. NoLay-Aways. None Charged. None Exchanged

M. JOSEPH'S SONS

512-514 WABASH AVE.

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from the welter of argument for and against the two sides, from explanations, Justification and indictments. American newspapers are unanimous in the statement that the war 1s a heinous crime against cifvlllzatlon. The American people stand aghast. Men who have devoted their Intelligence to the development of agriculture and Industrial enterprise see in the war endless calamity. The average man sees in It the'murder of thousands, perhaps millions of human beings.

INCOME AND OUTGO.

None of the political orators have as yet charged the European war to the new tariff bill, but they seem to be bordering on it closely. A few of the small fry here and there brazenly admit that the new tnriff act is responsible for decreased treasury receipts, resulting, as everybody knows, from the European war, which has brought Importations to a minimum. Of course, this charge sounds foolish, but it is, nevertheless, being made.

The New York Press, aji orthodox republican paper of standing, has taken notice of this charge, which It repudiates. The Press says: "Nothing could be more unfair than to attribute the present collap®e of treasury receipts to the tariff law, and nothing could be more foolish than to inject a tariff argument Into any special measure aimed to provide more revenue In the emergency which has grown out of the war in Europe. Anybody with the very least gumption knows that, since the war struck directly and almost entirely at the revenue produced from tarifT d-uties, the bigger the proportion of reciepts from such tariff duties had been the worse the revenues would have been hurt. Our old tariff revenues, therefore, would have been more severely cut by the war than these. The Internal revenue duties, for the most part, are still left, the income tax revenues are still left It is only the tariff revenues that are gone. If there hadn't been anything but tariff revenues there wouldn't have been any thing at all left."

COUNTY FAIR IT8 PURPOSE.

A county fair Is a public institution for the benefit, indirectly, of the community at large, but directly, for the farmer. It teaches the farmer Just where he Is deficient In this or that phase of farming and shows him how to remedy this deficiency. It is the great school of learning for the farmer and if he is progressive, he will benefit by what he sees and learns at the fair.

It has been said, and rightfully too, that the greatesrt and most successful

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$3.50, $3.00 and $2.50 Silk and Silk-and-Linon Shirts, soft cuffs, with and without separate collars, for

$1.35

BBS &§£$ Pit*

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TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE

farmers in this country today are those who were continually benefiting bv what their neighbors were doing those who visited their neighbors and learned how they met with success and then applied the success of their neighbor and their own success In one direction.

The county fair has done away with the visiting of neighbors to find out how this farmer plants potatoes to the best advantage, or how that farmer raises such fine poultry, cattle, sheep, hogs or horses. At the county fair, all the farmers in the county and adjoining counties, gather together to look at each other's products. Every farmer has a chance to compare his products with those of his neighbor and see where his defects are and where his strong points may be. At the county fair he not only talks with his immediate neighbor about this phase or that of farming, but he mixes with farmers from all parts of the surrounding country and learns from their own lips Just how they met with the success that they have.

The county fair Is the one big- educational event of the year, as far as the farmer Is concerned, and it is the progressive farmer who will be seen at al! sessions who will have all his products entered In the exhibits, and who, if he does not take the premium, will not be discouraged, but will try all the harder to make his products worthy before the next fair is held.

Terre Haute women will have no difficulty mounting the golden stairs. They are used to climbing into Ttrre Haute street cars.

The ejreitement and carnage of war is being pretty well supplied here by the automobile races. Two more dead at Elgin.

No doubt there never was a more favorable time to buy boats, nor a finer assortment from which to pick and choose.

What dull days there must be at Portsmouth, The Hague, Niagara Falls and other well known mediation points I

Fossil human bones have been found in London forty feet below the surface. Would anyone have bfelieved it went so deep.

Switzerland has bought some guns wherewith to shoot at aeroplanes. How does Switzerland do—aim them down?

The long dry spell leads some to believe that Mr. Cade had broken the rain letver on his weather machine.

The United States has no real war, but the National league pennant race is a passable imitation.

Pictures of Russian generals and soldiers show they are still enemies of the safety razor.

After all, we can get along pretty well without either perfumes or absinthe.

TEN YEARS AGO TODAY.

From the Tribnae File*.

August 28, 1904.

E. W. Johnson, Jr., returned from Lake Maxinkuckee to attend the Old Boys* reunion.

W. S. Roney, auditor of the Vandalla, left for San Francisco to attend the Knight Templar conclave.

George Ehrenhardt purchased the bariber shop located on "Wabash avenue, Just east of the Terre Haute house.

The motormen of the Terre Haute Electric Street Railway Co. defeated the conductors in a game of base ball by a score of 22 to 21.

BOOKS WORTH WHILE.

A series of suggestive titles furnished to The Tribune by the Emellne Fairbanks Memorial library.

Biographies.

John Morley—"Richard Cobden." J. Dykes Cam-pfoell—"Samuel Taylor Colerid«re."

A, W. Whitehead—"Gaspard £e Coligny, Admirtal of France." C. R. Markham—"Christopher Columbus."

MINUTE TALKS.

GEORGE EHRENHARDT (member of the board of public works)—'When I first organized my famous company of Germans, I thought it would be necessary to go to the Vaterland and assist, but now since I see there is no need of assistance there, I will take the company to England and free the Irish. Miss Hanrahan, clerk to Mayor Roberts, has promised to serve as cook if I promise to free the Irish.

THE FA IV.

Most baseball dope is soporific, Fans to beguile and fools betray Infused with hope 'tis a specific Until boobs hoot a game away. The sport, all know, has many angles That raise a shout and stir the blood But while some players may wear spangles, Some others should convey the hod. Your fan, though, never loses ardor. And for defeat can find a cause He always "buts" and "ifs" the harder, And ready is with his "because." —J. A. Waldron in Judge.

MET HIS MATCH.

Woodpackers are quite stubborn, hey? One tried to drill a hole Just out of town the other day

In an iron trolley pole. —Louisville Courier-Journal.

HOROSCOPE FOR A BAT

Tke stars Incline, bat do not compel. Copyright 1912 by the McClur® Newspaper Syndicate.

Saturday, August 29, 1914.

According to astrology this Is an unimportant day. Venus is in benefic aspect early in the day, but later Uranus is mildly adverse.

The planets favor the affairs and interests of women. It is a fortunate I day for their business enterprises, but they should guard against deception and fraud.

It is a lucky time for weddings, engagements and love affairs that begin under this configuration.

Under this sway of the stars It is supposed to be easy to make collections and to satisfy debts.

While restaurants should profit because of the kindly sway of Venus, many will fail, the seers declare, within the year.

There is a prophecy that dancing will be superceded by a novel public amusement, at first startling am' shocking-

Again trouble Is foreshadowed foi Rome, in connection -with unrest in Ita ly. The pope may be concerned by serious problems of the church.

Spain is under a rule of the stare which presages trouble before the autumn ends.

Persons whose blrthdate it is may be tempted to waste much time in pleasure and company but they will prosper if they attend to the serious affairs of life. Travel and change are not under a fortunate guidance.

Children born on this day are likely to be steady and trustworthy. Boys will win success easily and will gain through their friendships. Girls may be great favorites in society.

O

WHEN IN DOUBT Try The Tribune.

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Resinol is not an experiment. It is a doctor's prescription which proved so wonderfully successful for skin troubles that it has been used by other doctors all over the country for nineteen years. No other treatment for .he skin now before the public can show such a record of professional approval. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment (50c and $1), and Resinol Soap (25c): but for trial, free, write to Dept. 33-R, Relmol, Baltimore, Md.

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POINTED PARAGRAPHS.

An agreeable person Is the one who talks to you of yourself. If forced to eat their words, more men would have Indigestion.

Beware of people who are easily convinced they are dangerous. Every candidate for village con­

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1914.

Pabst

Blue Ribbon

The Beer of Quality

stable Imagines that the country will go to the dogs if he isn't elected. What some villages need Is fewer street fairs and more fair streets.

Necessity knows no law, and It is usually too poor to Interest a lawyer. This would be a grand old world if men would pay their bets as cheerfully as they pay grudges.

MADISON SQUARE

37 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY

AN Apartment Hotel embodying all the .personality and quiet atmosphere of a home with the conveniences, luxury and refinement of the hotel. No Tipping.

IDEAL IN LOCATION 1

ATTRACTIVE RATES FOR, THE SUMMED MONTHS Booklet Sent

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PHARMACY'

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SHAN