Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 September 1914 — Page 4
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The Terre Haute Tribune
AXD GAZETTE.
An Independent newspaper, Dally and Mjndu.v. The Terre Hante Gaeette, e«tahllahed ISttO. The Terre Hante Trl- ?"*?»#*, entnhllshed 1804.
X»uly newspaper in Terre Hante tunrIbk full day leased wlrt «enrlee of A»i»«K*lated Prrm. Central Preaa aaaoelanervlee.
•telephone—Business Department, both phones, 378 EdJtorial Department, Citizens. 155 Central Union, 316.
In advance, yearly, by mall. Dally I'M Sunday, $5.00. Dally only, 13.00. Sunday only, $2.00.
.Entered as secondclass matter January 1, 1906, at the postofrice
at Terre Haute, Indiana, under the act of congress of March 2, 1879,
A Terre Hante newipaper for Terre Hante people. The only paper In Terre Haute owned, edited and published by Terre Hauteana.
jfflfSk Tb« Association of Amac(flillll
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A-ivertiser* has ez-
n|nw aminedl and cartifiad Co tha circulation of this pub* lication, Tha figwree of circulation contained ia the AftsvcUtion'o mh port only ore gur.rantaecL
Association of American Advertisers
2-3-11 Whrtehtll 8% K. T. Citj
THE NOMINEES.
The close proximity of the Illinois primaries make them of particular In terest to the people of this section. The republicans nominated Lawrence Y, Sherman, the progressives nominated Raymond Robins, and the democrats nominated Roger C. Sullivan. The first two were nominated with little or no contest. Mr. Sullivan was nominated after a bitter fight in which four candidates figured and which finally centered in one candidate on whom all elements united with a hope of beating Sullivan.*
According to the newspapers and the organizations opposing Roger C. Sullivan, his nomination would be tantamount to the complete annihilation of popular government and the exhaltation of a boss.
According to his friends, Sullivan may be a "boss," but he is a good boss, a man who has risen from the humblest position in life t« a place of eminence In the financial and commercial world, who makes friends and keeps them, and whose political notions all the time are characterized by a afeneiss and saneness foreign to some of the political acrobats now in public life. ... ...'
The Chicago Tribune, sometimes considered a power in Illinois politics, at the outset of the campaign could find no more dignified appelatlon for Mr. Suliifvan than "the' biscuit maker." A few days ago the Tribune came out in support of Sullivan.
The primary returns Indicate that a ®oo'd many Illinois people are disposed to replace the political affairs of the country in the hands of well grounded men. The old rule of the efficiency of practice over theory still holds good in a great many things.
FALSE ALARMS.
From this distance one of the most interesting phases of the war abroad is the manner in which the combatants have manipulated intelligence regarding the tactics of the armies to win public sympathy.
A dispatch in the Tribune yesterday told how passengers on the HollandAmerican liner Rotterdam had passed resolutions denouncing reports of illtreatment or atrocities by the Germans.
Since International conventions have put soldiers of all civilized nations upon a high code of ethics as regards their relation toward each other, it has become increasingly common that in conflicts between civilized powers such charges of cruelty as are now being made in the great war, touch upon the contact of soldier and ctvilian.
Our own operations around Vera CVuz resulted in the death of a number of American troops and the slaying ut many Mexican "snipers." Apparently it is hard for a man with a rifle in his house to resist taking a shot or
HOW TO GAIN WEIGHT A POUND A DAY
Thin men and women who would like to Increase their weight with 10 or 15 pounds of healthy "stay there" fat should try eating a little Sargol ,with their meals for a while and note results. Here is a good test worth trying. First weigh yourself and measure yourself. Then take Sargol—one tablet with every meal—for two weeks. Then weigh and measure again. It isn't a question of how you look or feel or what your friends say and think. The "scales and the tape measure will tell their own story, and most any thin man or woman can easily add from five to eight pounds in the first fourteen days by following this simple direction. And best of all, the new flesh stays put.
Sargol does not of itself make fat, but mixing with your food, it turns the fats, sugars and starches of what you have eaten, into rich, ripe fatprodiicing nourishment for the tissues and blood—prepares it in an easily assimilated form which the blood can readily accept. All this nourishment now passes from your body as waste. But Sargol stops the waste and does it quickly and makes the fat-producing contents of the very same meals you are eating now develop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol is safe, pleasant, efficient and inexpensive. Leading druggists in Terre Haute and vicinity sell, it in large boxes—forty tablets to a package—on a guarantee of weight Increase or money back
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No one should eat mushrooms unless he Is certain they are of an edible variety. When in doubt, don't partake. Consult someone who knows, and refrain from trying experiments.
On the Way to the Lumber Room
two at the hateful invader as he marches past the very door. Such outbreaks call for harsh repression and American troops were no slower in extending it than the Germans appear to have been.
It is a healthy attitude to defer belief in all stories of needless cruelty by the soldiers in this greatest war. One feels a reasonable certainty that such practices will not be proved against the English, the Germans, the French or the Belgians. No so much Is known of the temper of the Russian troops, while the Servians are comparatively new in the European war theater.
MUSHROOM SEASON.
Two citizens of Lafayette, Ind., are dead and two are in the hospital in a precarious condition as the result of eating mushrooms which they had gathered for dinner Sunday. Some naturalist might attempt to say in just what humorous or resentful mood nature was when she decided to make mushrooms in the image of toadstools, but the mere layman must wonder. Between the deadly poisonous and the deliciously wholesome exists a tragic difference, but too often the difference escapes the observer and remains for the consumer to ascertain in sorrow. "If it kills you, it is a toadstool if not, it is a mushroom," is the humorous rural sage's recipe for the uninitiated, and in actual practice the advice appears too often to be followed literally. That is one way to tell the difference between edible and poisonous fortunately, there are other ways more to be recommended.
This is the mushroom season. The meadows are returning their harvests to the early morning gleaners. Unfortunately, one's ardor is not always matched by his wisdom and nearly every paper tells of some family poisoned through the common error. For toadstools grow almost anywhere mushrooms will, and the two frequently fall into the same skillet.
HUSBANDS AND WIVES.
Dr. Mary Halton, of Greencastle, says married folks ought to desert each other temporarily now and then and go off on little jaunts by themselves. A matrimonial vacation is the best prevention for divohce that can be found, she asserts.
Of course the idea is not entirely original with Dr." Halton. Mrs. Havelock Ellis believes in the Vacation idea for matrimony. She claims that she and her husband are extremely attached to each other, but they never stay around together long enough to get bored. According to a recently published interview, it will be remembered, that the Ellis arrangement includes the maintenance of separate homes in London and an entirely independent mode of life for each one.
This rather fantastic mode of living, it must be admitted, is hardly suited to the needs of the ordinary mode of life of the ordinary individual. It is a bit epctreme. But the germ of the idea is worth considering.
The vacation idea is a good one and ought to be carried farther than it is. If one should take a vacation from the office every year then why not from some other things?
One woman we heard of recently, takes a (vacation from her bric-a-brac now and then. She puts it all away and lives in a nice bare-looking house. Other folks have their pet hobbles along the vacation line. Some people .take a v? i.t1 *n from eating
J#»m.1 ».u «•»,'»
—Philadelphia Public Ledger.
meat. Others insist upon taking vacations from drinking various cheering draughts and still others from not drinking them.
It all depends upon the thing that bores you. Sometimes it even stretches the mind to take a vacation from polite reading, and a perfect orgy of frothy tales and thunderous melodramas is the result.
It is easy enough to contemplate taking Ivacations from our duties occasionally, but to push the idea to the sticking point—how about an occasional vacation from our fallings?
NEW BUSINESS.
Publication was made in the Tribune yesterday of the invitation extended to the Chamber of Commerce here to have Terre Haute merchants and manufacturers join in a movement to send an exposition ship from New Orleans to South America, Such business opportunities as may arise out of the war at first seem vague and indirect, but the facts are that this business Is coming to America if given encouragement. Here is one of the strarvs that proves it. South America cannot get any "mo|vie" films from Europe. Consular reports say that the agents of the American companies are reaping a harvest In contracts.
South Americans have relied chiefly on Europe for their film supplies. American films have been admired, but it has cost more to get them. In the "movie" business, as in many other industries, the Europeans have made the successful bid for South American trade. Now that they must have American films or none at all the American producers will doubtless take advantage of the opportunity which comes knocking at their doors.
It is altogether gratifying to learn that the South American taste in motion pictures is good. Cowboy films, which have In the past been the bane of "motvie" theaters in the United States, are not wanted in South America. Nothing Is desired but honest representations of life, dramas comprehensible and believable.
The sending of large quantities of these films to our Latin neighbors will give them a real familiarity with the United States. They will come to know its natural scenery, its manner of building, Its social customs, ltg ideas of propriety and impropriety, its Institutions which are peculiar to itself and those which are common to all civilized countries. Nothing could tend to bring the average South American so close to the United States as the constant representation of American life and American scenes at the moving picture theaters. It should be a beneficial implement of education.
Those timorous Canadians who are stretching their tvlsion to catch sight of the 7,000 Germans who propose to invade the dominion by way of the Niagara suspension bridges, should beware of eyestrain.
Up to the present time there's no disposition to change the names of Paris and Berlin—no matter how much their physical appearance may be changed later on.
Having added up the reported casualties, it may be stated without fear of contradiction that there are no sol' diers left in Europe. Therefore the war is over.
"The German army will destroy itself." predicts the London Chronicle. Trust a London editor to put his finger on the only hope for such a consummation.
According to the notion of the county council, the new poor farm site was a poor farm sita
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TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE
ft
HOROSCOPE FOR A DAY.
The itara incline, but do not compel. Copyright 1912 by the McCluie Newspaper Syndicate.
Friday, September 11, 1914.
This is a lucky day If one beware of entrance to a quarrel. Uranus rules with power for good, while Neptune and Saturn are tooth friendly. Mars is mildly adverse.
The rule is for mentality and
thought. It is held to ibe a time well fitted for speculative reasoning, scientific inquiry and the consideration of great and important matters.
Uranus in kindly aspect is believed to make for positive, independent, business-like action, while at the same time it awakens the imaginative faculties and leads the mind Into original channels.
Neptune today encourages all who are Interested in shipping affairs. The good sway of this planet is said to incline to success those who sell, choice foodstuffs, tinned goods and other delicacies.
Mars is in an aspect that may cause excessive demonstrativeness, jealousy and hasty speech.
Persons whose birthdate it is have a lucky omen for the year. Change travel and many pleasant experiences are probable. Young women have the prognostication of romance. Quarrels and dissensions In the family may cause heartaches,, however.
Children born on this day will be rather restless, but they shouM be successful and should prosper. Inventors are often subjects of Virgo.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY From the TriUnnf Flick,
September 10. 1904.
Mr. and M^rs. Robert Nitsche left for ten days' visit at St. Louis.
John Manion, Lee Jackson and Tom
Mahoney returned from St. Louis, where they have been attending the world's fair.
Terre Haute defeated South Bend by a score of 2 to 1, and cinched second place In the Central baseball league for the season of 1904.
BOOKS WORTH WHELE.
A series of suggestive titles furnished to The Tribune by the Emaline Fairbanks Memorial library.
Poetry and Drama.
"The Poems of Henry Van Dyke." James W. Foley—"Boys and Girls." Ruth McEnery Stuart— "Dat.ldy DoFunny's Wisdom Jingles."
Charlton Andrews "Drama ToDay." Fannie Y. Cory—"The Fanny Cory Mother Goose."
James Whitcomb Riley—"The Flying Islands, of the Night." Elizabeth Hall—"For Your Birthday."
August Strindberg "Plays, Third Series." R.obert W. Service—"Rhymes of a Ro.vting Stone'
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A Showing ol New Fall Waists and Skirts That Means a Big Saving To You
A visit to our store will convince you or anyone that our prices are the lowest in the city and our garments as good as the best. .•••*..:
OUR TERMS ARE CASH—A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANY GARMENT UNTIL YOU WANT IT. SELECT YOUR FALL SUIT, DRESL', OR SKIRT NOW AND WE WILL LAY IT AWAY FOR YOU.<p></p>GOLDBERG'S
There is no doubt that the American press, as a whole, desires to give, as far as it can, impartial and unbiased news. But in the anxiety to print the news as soon as it comes over the
cahle from
Peoplo Should Have Fled. These writers seem to forget entirely that Antwerp is a besieged fortress, around which the opposing armies are fighting for every foot of ground in utter disregard of human life, either of their own or of others.
Non-combatants have no business to be In such a place. Everyone of the
inhabitants of Antwerp hals been fully
aware that the said fortress would be
takin&
of the cit the
$15
-AT-
VALUES $20.00 $22.50 $25.00
$7.95, $10, $12 and $15 Other dresses up to $49.50.
Germans Defend Operation of The Zepplin Dirigible Fleet
625 WABASH AVENUE
"Where Style arid F*rice Meet"
A SUE OF NEW FALL SWTS
Broadcloths, Serges Poplins Gaberdines
You never have and never will see such suits at this price as this store offers for a limited time only. To introduce ourselves to you we offer new Fall Suits, worth $20.00 to $25.00 each for $15.00. All newest styles, 45 inch jackets of finest tailoring. All sizes, 16 to 44 and 39 to 55 stout size.
SMART DRESSES at $7.95 to $15.00
Beautiful Dresses of satin crepe de chine, wool and silk poplins and other materials made up in the newest styles at prices that defy competition.
625 WASASH AVENUE
{Statement of German-American Chamber of Commerce.)
London and Paris, there is
very little time for close investigation and analysis. Nearly all of the American papers print the reports J»ent to them bjr the news agencies in most casefe verbatim. A case in point is the quoting of mislead inga statements of international law irv reference to the throwing of bombs from Zeppelins on a besieged fortified city.
Germany is accused of restoring to "barbarous" and "illegal" methods of warfare. The distressing picture drawn by an American physicia.n of the Red Cross in Belgium of the deplorable consequences of the falling of these bombs in the middle' of the night on peaceably sleeping citizens and his graphic description of the effects of the explosions of these bombs has induced the editorial writers of our New York newspapers to speak of German "atrocities" and "acts of barbarism" and to point to Germany as having lost all moral sense.
ring power to throw explosives from aircraft. At that time, England objected to it, and it was clear that the reason she objected was because this was the only weapon by whloh she could be attacked as long as she had the undisputed power of the seas.
Germany was willing to forego the right to use explosives from aircraft, providing England was willing to relinquish her right to seize merchant ships belonging to citizens of a hpstile nation. This question was strongly debated, for not only Germany but all other ppwers except England realized that the right of the warring power to seize, the commercial fleet of the opposing power was a great injustice to innocent owners, especially as property belonging to citizens of neutral powers would be carried in these vessels. But England refused to give up her right of taking prizes and Germany, in consequence, joined France in declaring her right to throw explosives from aircraft.
Aside from the legal aspects of the case, it strikes one as rather peculiar to see how furious the English and French press have become in their denunciations of Germany, when the fact is recalled that neither France nor England found any fault with the acts of' the' French aviators who threw bombs on the peaceful towns of I Augsburg and Nuerenbe.rg at. the beginning of the war.
Let us all be fair in this' matter. I We all know that General Sherman was right when he said that war is "hell." None of us like to see inno
cen
gians have razed to the ground all tunatelv on the adjoining hospital artd houses around the forts, so as to have private* houses. a clear aim from these forts against deplorable that it seems so difthe attacking German army. There
It is clear, therefore, to any unbiased mind that the accusation made by the English and French press in reference to the employment of bomte from Zeppelins is but the outcry of nations beaten at their own game. For it must always be remembered that when the question arose at The Hauge conference in 1907 that it was France (at that time in possession of the most powerful fleet of aeroplanes in the world) that insisted more than any '"other nation, upon the right of a war-.
non-combatants suffer, and there
ig no questlon
bombarded and that the troops within j. Qermans, are sorry that the bombthe town and forts woUld resist the[
that all of us, including
thrower Qf
the Zeppelin. missed his
...
Germans with mark dropping the bombs, not on .the
all the power th£y can summon. arsenel and the Belgian headquarters We have been told that the Bel-
a^.
was aiming, but unfor-
or
was plenty of time for the non-com- tjir01y the subtle influence of !the batants to get out of town. By not g^m-ces from which we get practically availing themselves of this opportunity
they subjected themselves to all the risks connected with living in a besieged city. Whether explosive projectiles arc thrown by heavy guns or bombs bv Zeppelins is entirely immaterial. Could there have been an outcry if the people, instead of being killed by the bombs from the Zeppelin, had boon torn to pdeces by the 1.400 pound shells of the German mortars?
American news writers, to
all our news
Equally deplorable is 'the fact that the cable from Germany to this neu-
tral country is cut, for with news coming from both sides it.would not be so difficult for Americans to receive a clear and unbiased impression.
THE REASON WHY.
I'm tired of all motor cars. So.much so that they set me fretting I'm tired of roof-garden stars.
Their singing and their pirouetting. The tango parlors "round the town, I must confess, ne'er make me cheery The summer girl excites a frown
And makes me nothing else but weary.
I'm tired of all summer sports— No matter what the summer outing, You'll find me always out of sorts,
And my fatigue there is no doubting. Thpse thiners do make me tired—oh! Because I read so much about them. Alas! mv funds are always low,
And I am forced to do without them!. —Nathan M. Levy in Judge.
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1914.
Some Clinic. Cut This Out For I Future Reference /.i
On May 1,1909, the Palmer 'School of Chiropractic, of Davenport, la., began I tabulating arid systematizing the clinic work done in the school and from-May 1, 1909, to July 17, 1914, there were 13,375 individual and different peoplo registered and adjusted at the school by the senior students under the supervision of the faculty body. This shows where the people of various parts of the United States and' othfer countries go and also the standing of the Palmer Fountain Iiea/i School. This Is not all the practical work the students get, but many of them get people outside of the school to adjust, which would be several thousand more that could b© added to the above figures, and bear In mind that
M. & F. V. & R. M. THOMAS are the only graduates of the above school in Vigo and Clay counties.
Offices corner 7th and Walnut streets, Terre Haute. The Winkleplek Block, BrazlL
Investigate.
PRINTING
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Thoroughly equipped. Faculty of 18 »fiM Instructors. Write for particulars and^ catalogue. Veterinary College, Terras Haute. Tndlaha. 4
TBY A TRIBUNE WAftT AD. OR JBEST RESULTS,
