Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 September 1914 — Page 4
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The Terre Haute Tribune
AND GAZETTE.
An Independent newspaper. Dally and Sunday. The Terre Haute Gazette, e»fal|l.shcl 1X09. The Terre Haute Tribune. established 1S04.
Only newspaper In Terre Haute huvlnpr tull day leased wire service of As»o"Ia led Press. Central Press association service.
Telephone—Business Department, both phones, 37S Editorial Department, Citizens, 155 Central Union, 316.
In advance, yearly, by mall. Dally and Sunday, $5.00. Daily only, $3.00. Sunday only. $2.00.
Kntered as secondclass matter January 1, 1906, at the postoffice
•at Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act Of Congress of March 2, 1879.
A, Terre Haute newspaper (or Terre Haute people. The only paper In Terre .Haute owned, edited and published by Terre Hauteans.
Tfca Aa
•mined ud certified the circulation «f this pub-
Whitehall BMg.
ROOSEVELTS SPEECH.
Mr. Roosevelt's speech In New Orleans last night Indicates that he believes that within two years there will •be no more republican party. He says the republican party is so far out of tune with the modern notion of social Justice and progressive legislation that its demise is sure and certain. He takes It that should the progressives vote their ticket and vote it straight .the interment of the party he once led and which honored him with the presidency will be soon achieved, no longer to be a factor in American politics. In his New Orleans speech he character l«es the republican party as: "A party that deliberately proposes to become the bulwark of Burbon an tagonism to progressive thought throughout the nation."
One can imagine how this conception of republicanism rankles in the breast of Colonel Roosevelt. He sees in republicanism the obstacle to every national policy that he has advocated and he Interprets the purpose of the republican party to stifle every reform contemplated in his political program. Judging from his New Orleans speech, the former president has determined acquiesce in no plan suggested by pollical expediency, to amalgamate •with republicans anywhere and his moose call is to rally the progressives everywhere to a show of strength intended to preserve their party integrity and move on towards the day when
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appreciation of his political pol
icies will make victory certain. He wants progressives everywhere to put down republicanism as long as It typifies the elements that controlled the Chicago convention and his rejection of these leaders is none the less emphatic now than it was a year ago in June. His call to his fellow compatriots from New Orleans means no quarter anywhere from any progressive.
CAUSE TO COMPLAIN,
The Tribune was in receipt, early Tuesday morning, of a telephone call from N. Van Borssun, who complained that at the Phil Sheridan school, at Twelfth and Chestnut streets, children were compelled to wait outside in the heavy rain for the school doors to open. There should be no reason for such a condition to exist and it is to be hoped that the mere directing of the attention of the school authorities to the matter will be sufficient to remedy it.
MY BROTHER'S KEEPER.
Few more interesting stories have come out of the war than the account in today's Tribune furnished by Dr. Max Henius in which he says that the American spirit of self-sacrifice and broad humanity was the saving grace In many critical situations arising out of the departure of non-combatants from the war zone.
Thousands of American tourists have
MANYREMARKABLE RESULTS OBTAINED IN TERRE HAUTE
Many cases of chronic eczema, salt rheum and tetter, lasting over ten years, that have exhausted the patience of the family doctor and baffled the skill of skin specialists are now yielding promptly to this new prescription for skin diseases. Arnolox is a clean, mild, antiseptic liquid. Apply or wash the skin with a few drops, the
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and burning stops instantly. Bar•er's itch, ring worm, red nose, pimples, acne, are banished in a few days. /So confident are we of the great merit of the Amolox Prescription we have .n made arrangements with Buntln Drug
Co. to pay back the money to any skin sufferer where the results are not Jjsfciv satisfactory, the patient alone to be i"1 '.he judge.
A young man in high school was recently cured by Amolox of a very bad ase of acne. His face was so broken out with sores and pustules, that the embarrassment from his unsightly appearar.ee kept him from attending all social functions. A prominent citizen was cured of a chronic case of years' standing of eczema of the hands. Many ca&es like the above are being cured -jaily in towns where Amolox is being Ir troduced.
arrived from Europe. Many more are still to come. Of those who have just crossed the ocean in emergency ships many have traveled in quarters gen erally occupied by steerage passengers,
The papers have been filled with ac counts of millionaires who have bunked In dark holes, or deserting their nightly sentinels, the rats, have wrapped themselves in blankets and taken refuge in the clearer air of the decks. Delicate ladies accustomed only to the most shielded of lives, have ridden in cattle cars and eaten coarse rations.
In every case we have been thankful enough to have our friends back home again and they have been thankful enough to be here to have accepted any inconveniences of travel.
It ha* been only natural to feel sorry for these folks who have had to make their first acquaintance with the realities of life below decks. Our hearts have gone out to the passengers who have been made faint by the odors of the steerage quarters and to the millionaires who have missed their usual luxurious apartments.
But, perhaps, we oughtn't to regret this too much. It Is a shocking suggee tion, but, possibly, after all, there has been some gain as well as much loss in this untoward experience.
There Is something decidedly wholesome about a great leveling process of this kind. Brought face to face with the grim realities of life perhaps some of these sorely tried tourists have had the opportunity to see for the first time what the struggle for existence may mean.
SELF-HELP.
C. P. J. Mooney, editor of the Memphis Commercial-Appeal, made an address on "Keeping Business at Home" at the recent commercial conference held in Memphis of the Cotton States Merchants' association.
The speaker said some pertinent things which apply generally. Some of his observations might be adapted with profit to any community. He said: "The way to build up a community is to believe in studied and consistent co-operation.
Support your hame mer
chant and home manufacturer. They are the one that make the pay rolls and that brings the benefit right back to you. This cycle sustained by an effort on the part of everyone in the community means a prosperous community. In other words, buy it at home. If it is manufactured at home, all the more reason for buying it there. Fat pay rolls are the staff of life for prosperity. A word to the business man: "The sudden breaking out of war caused many to run to cover. "Like the chicken on whom the rose leaf fell, some of us became a prey to fear and were ready to declare the sky is falling. 'Now our vision is clearing, our alarm has fled, we have recovered our poise and our courage. 'We are seeing, also, our opportunity. "Swiftly and almost overwhelmingly has come to us the perception of the fact that the competition of continental Europe has been taken away. "We are faced with a condition and an opportunity, both tending to our advantage as a country of industry, agriculture and trade. "Good times are ahead, if Americans see and seize the present opportunity for enlarging their industries and trading. "There is big work to do and big profits are to be had."
LIVES ASIDE.
According to the morning dispatches, the imperial guard of the German army has been wiped out in a battle twentyfive miles north of Paris. Too few of the details of the engagement are known to determine whether this means a permanent check to the army of the kaiser. The continuous fighting between the German invaders and the allies in France Is not, from the reports at hand, separable into battles or series of battles. It is, in effect, one tremendous battle of which the end cannot be foreseen.
There was never such a war. Other wars have been waged as a succession of easily distinguishable combats. The great war of 1914 is fought by armies that do not sleep, that do not pause to rest, to breathe. On and on they fight, with super-human energy and incomprehensible endurance.
When history is written, the German advance in France may be satisfactorily analyzed. Each phase of the endless fight may be isolated and arbitrarily labeled. The battle of Mons, the battle of Charleroi, he battle of St. Quentin and countless other battles may be assigned definite ratings. But to give any local designation to the great general battle which is raging throughout the north of France would be impossible.
In such a titanic struggle it is not surprising that the war correspondents and even the professional military experts can give the watching world no satisfactory elucidation. In a general way the great tactics of invader and defender may be known, but how these tactics are being followed is, for the present, beyond comprehension.
Ther«i is no accounting for taste in recreation. Some good '•'ople like to
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feed on bacon and sleep on rocks In the northern wilderness, others enjoy the malaria of the Brazilian or Central African wilderness, and here's the governor of Missouri, who puts in his spare time working on the roads.
Has anyone stopped to think of poor old Vic Huerta's predicament? He was going to Paris to enjoy his well earned retirement, and then Europe got busy and made Paris about as uncomfortable as Mexico City.
Keeping in mind the war spirit and remembering the fate of "Sailor" Gus Einert, it might be said that the naval forces are inferior to the land forces in attack.
A Gwynneville lad hanged himself because his mother would not let him go to see a wreck. If such determination could have been applied to hoeing potatoes.
Tes, war is universal in its ill effects. The present conflict in Europe has so disturbed Illinois cows that milk is raised in price to the consumers In Chicago.
Cyrus Townsend Brady has sailed for home, so he should hawe a book out on the European war before marry days.
A new war figure appears—Rustem Bey. Wonder If he's any relation of our own Mobile bay?
For the Central league, 1914ter out!
-Bat-
H0E0SC0PE FOE A DAY.
rite stars Incline, but do not compel. Copyright 1912 by the McCluio Newspaper Syndicate.
Wednesday, September 9, 1914.
This is one of the troubled days in which malefic influences from the stars operate upon th« affairs of men. According to the reading of astrology, Uranus, Mercury and Jupiter are all in adverse aspect.
There is an unfortunate aspect for risky ventures or games of chance. The rule is held as encouraging misplaced confidence, dishonesty and wrong judgment.
While this configuration prevails it is well to keep from petty worries and to avoid noticing trifling annoyances, as the sway of the planets is likely to produce undue sensitiveness and irritability.
As the aspect is believed to affect the stomach and bowels, it is wise to be exceedingly careful In diet and in the selection of drinking water.
Quarrels and misunderstandings among political leaders are foretold. These will be more numerous than in previous campaigns. A man conspicuous In public affairs will lose many friends and party allies.
Persons whose birthdate it is have the omen of change and anxiety for the coming year. Both men and women will travel more than usual. Loss of money through speculation is a probability.
Children born on this day are likely to be selfish and careless. They should be trained in economical habits. These subjects of Virgo have Mercury as their principal ruling planet. Many of them have talent for artistic pursuits.
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE
German Torpedoes Hit Rail Service
GKR9TANS ARE PLAYING HAVOC WITH THE FRENCH RAILROAD SERVICE BY TUTTING TORPEDOES ON THE TRACKS. PHOTO SHOWS HOW IT IS DONE.
HIS WAR EXPERIENCE!
One of Fortunate .Americans to Se-! cure Passage Home—Courtesies Shown the Yankees.
Dr. Max Henius, head of the Henius college of fermentology in Chicago, was in the city Monday the guest of friends, en route from Copenhagen, Denmark, to hi6 home in Chicago. Dr. Henius returned on the steamer Oscar II. The steamer came around the north coast of Denmark, around the north coast of Scotland and then proceeded across the north Atlantic route. The captain of the Oscar II at night ordered all port holes unobstructed, the ship was lighted from stem to stern and every precaution was taken to let any battleships the Oscar might encounter know that it was a neutral passenger bdat.
Dr. Henius, along with sixty-seven other first-class passengers, gave up their first-class passage to women and children on board and they occupied places in the steerage. He says: 'I have made twenty-seven trips across the Atlantic. I have enjoyed none like I did this. Among the men who surrendered their passage and took places in the steerage were two] bankers from Philadelphia, a professor from Harvard, three Chicago mariu-1 facturers and other men of means, hardly accustomed to. steerage trips. However, we dined first-class, which relieved much of the onerous part of steerage. All took the situation with characteristic American philosophy. The good spirit of the Americans was the saving feature of the experience. "The captain issued positive orders that war should not be discussed. The only fiagis displayed were American flags and Danish flags. The orchestra was forbidden to play German, Russian, French or English airs and at the captain's dinner the only toasts offered were to American and Denmark. The Americans were keen t^o appreciate the spirit of such arrangements and they kept the interest sustained in other matters besides the war. "My passage cost me $75 and I could have sold it for $400. On every hand every deference is shown to American tourists. When they discover you are an American, they exert themselves to help you with your baggage, expedite matters for you in the customs and do all they can for you. "I have a summer place on the coast of Uitland, the north part of Denmark. You can see the American flag floating from the staff for ten miles and you can wager that the old flag and the statue of Liberty looked good to me. You ought to hear the cheers that resounded through that boat when the crowds on deck and below decks caught sight of Liberty statue."
OLD ADAM.
Old Adam was the lucky guy. If history is true: He did not fret like you and I
When humid days were due. He had the finest summer suit This world has ever seen: As cool as any robe de nuit.
The fig leaf'^ what I mean. No palm beach outfit did he buy Nor white silk socks and such, And then sit 'round and bake and fry
And rail at weather much. He wore no hot suspenders and No clinging B. V. D.'s. That leaf of his was simply prand,
He never missed a breeze. Ah! would old Adam's dav return, Back, back to the creation When people didn't toast and burn
And boll In perspiration. The women have returned, almost. But man, the poor old duffer, Has got to sit around and roast
In many clothes and suffer. —St. Joseph, Mo., Gazette.
DISTRIBUTION OF THE COSTS OF WAR
Even if the war should come to an end in a few months, the echo Of its disturbing effects would be felt in the market for capital, because of the considerable loans which it would be necessary for the governments involved to offer to the public. Experience in former wars has shown that the countries which prepare to absorb new issues of their national loans do so by quietly reducing their holdings of foreign securities. In time of peace, tms would not be done with the precipitation and sacrifice of values which occur under the threat of war, but the effect would probably be to depress the price of other securities and make it difficult to obtain capital for new enterprises while the costs of war were being distributed over the world's money markets.
America, therefore, whatever her temporary profits from an enhanced demand for certain products and the opening of new opportunities for her commerce and shipping, will be consumption of hundreds of millions of the world's savings in supporting contending armies and keeping them supplied with the weapons of destruction.—From American Finance in the "War Tempest, by Charles A. Conant, in the American Review of Review for September.
Beer in Light Bottles
^nllin1 .—.
TEN YEAES AGO TODAYFrom the Trlbm« Kile*.
September 8, 1904.
Robert Clifton, of the Vandalia storekeeper's office, left for Philadelphia on a visit.
Robert L. Webb, 69 years old, died at the home of his son-in-law, John E. Beggs, 318 South Fifth street. "Uncle Joe" Cannon and James Watson agreed to come to Terre Haute and open the republican campaign September 16.
E. A. Ferguson, a street car conductor, was badly bruised and cut when he was knocked from the running board of his car by a pole on the Brazil interurban line.
BOOKS W0ETH WHILE.
A series of suggestive titles furnished to The Tribune by the ISmeliae Fairbanks Memorial library.
Popular Fiction.
Montague Glass—"Abe and Mawruss." Pierre Lotl—"Disenchanted."
Mary E. Waller—"Flamstead Quarries." Mrs. Humphry Ward—"The History of David Grieve."
Mrs. C. N. Williamson—"The House of the Lost Court." FreJeric Remington—"John Ermine, of the Yellowstone."
Stop STOMACH SICKNESS
Take Saint Johannis Drop«
Diarrhoea. Colic Cholera, Cramps, Paint in the Stomach bring- or dan serous ailments tiniest checked at once. Attackf are sudden. Agony lasti until after the doctor comes perhaps he may arrive too late. In infants sucb attacks may end disds trously while waiting for the doctor. A remedy at hand may save you endless
grief for loved ones—or yourself griping misery. ST. JOHANNIS DROPS were used for years in his medical practice by Dr. H. C. Lemke. Thoujiinda of persona have used them. Man assert they D«e their lives, or their children's lives to the prompt relief given when unexpeoted Stomaoh illness invaded the home. A. remedy at hand is worth a dozen doctors mile* away. It li an insnrancf of relief and of •aving in doctor's bills. ST. JOHASNI8 DHOPS are purely compounded, scientifically tested, harmless, Basy to take-inst a few drops In Bugor and water. 3old !:i every drug store. Demand Dr. H. O. Lemke 8T. JOHANNIS DROPS and take no other. Name Is on all wrappers and labels and blown iit bottle. If vonr druKgift has none in stock, send his name nnii 25 cents for a bottled I rpct to the Dr. H. O. Lemke Medicine Co.. CUicatiO. 111.
Pure Beer Is Food
Schlitz is made pure. The Brown Bottle keeps it pure from the brewery to your glass. Light starts decay even in pure beer —the light bottle is insufficient protection. Why should you risk impurity?
See that Crown is
branded Schlitz.
The Beer
A natural question. Every purchaser should ask it Every manufacturer who cannot answer fairly, squarely and honestly deserves ostracism.
Both" Phones 175
jos schlitz Brewing Co. 545 N. 6th St., Terre Haute
That Made Milwaukee Famous.
Tauler Coal and Feed Co.
1615 Lafayette Ave. New Phone 1943 Old Phone 679 MRS. A. TAUFER, Mgr.
E S A S E E E 8 1 9 1 4
and MRS. A. TAUFER, Props.
16th and Grand Ave. .(Branch Store) Old Phone 2676
Coal and Feed ol All Kinds
TELEPHONE ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION
Vigo County Fair
AND RACES
A. TAUFER, Mgr.
15-16-17-ia
A A N N I
TRY A TRIBUNE WANT AD., ONE yENT A WORD, FOR BEST RESULTS
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