Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 July 1915 — Page 7
1915.
a Sues-
VALS
Billed
Hdf Price
lie. Pail Beach cloth or at de-half price.
$1.00
Lnov€ty cloth, former
I $1.00
$1.98
*/e!ty coth nd poplin, 3rmer
ICG
ieSlirts,29c
ith yo top ,and flare Cleamg
29c
kins, 79c
rane linen with ly sole for
79c
sfs $1.50
Daiblae and white and Jfofss. ^1 50
Ms $1.00
summc stocks some
.s
$1.00
ce Waists
3ace Wsts all season ii (fcrenmdous still a yver. ^aists that sold irtg thai all for quick
ts.
$1.98
raists,
of them good
'IS."!1.. $1-98
jettiioats,
$1
ts in Jne, black, green Cleang $X.OO
ni millieM-/?jyeu
Doors to Terre Haute3s Greatest Twice-a-Year Event
JAL CLEARING SALE
$20 Palm Beach Suits $10
About seventy-five Palm Beach Suits that sold from $12.75 to $20.00. The Norfolk and its many variations is well represented. Take your choice of any of these at the Clearing Sale Price of
$5.00 Palm Beach Skirts $3.95
Our regular $5 stock of Palm Beach, Pique Cordeline and Linen Skirts, made with yoke top pockets and flare bottoms. Not abetter stock at the price in the city. Clearing Sale Price
$1.00 Porch Dresses 49c
Made of light and dark percale in striped and figured patterns, well made and comfortable to work in. y|Qp $1.00 values. Clearing Sale Price
$1.00 Waists for 69c
All our regular line of dollar Blouses, consisting of voiles, batistes and organdies in high or low neck long or short sleeves all sizes. Clearing Sale Price
Up to $35 Silk Dresses $5.00
A group of Silk Dresses in taffetas, poplins and *aessalines all good spring styles and very good for A A wear aJl summer. Clearing Sale Price tPeJ.UU
69c Waists 29c
Three hundred Cotton Waists in this lot made of voile, organdie and batiste high or low neck, long or OQn short sleeves all sizes. Clearing Sale Price
Up to $2.98 Children's Coats 39c
In black and white checks, blue and black serges QG/» sold up to $2.98. Clearing Me Price OJ/C
79c Children's Dresses 29c
Children's Blue Gingham Dresses, well made and prettily trimmed sold regularly for 79c. Clearing 9Q/» Sale Price
no
$3.95
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
may sustain during the month set aside for this purpose. We have now perfected plans for our NINETEENTH SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALES, TO BEGIN MONDAY, MORNING AT NINE O'CLOCK, offering thousands of Suits, Coats, Dresses, Waists, Skirts, Petticoats, Children's Garments and *Millinery at prices that sound like extreme exaggeration but which will bear the closest scrutiny.
-2
Entire
dren
No C. 0. D.s, Refunds, Approvals
wM2to
Here's the greatest millinery news this store ever printed. Every article of millinery in our stock goes in this July Clearance
Trimmed Hats, UntrimmedHats Paradise, Plumes Aigrettes Wings, Flowers, Ribbons
NOTHING WILL BE CARRIED OVER Every pattern hat in the house that sold up to $18. Clearing Sale Price Pine Milans, Leghorns, Panamas, Hair Braids and Hemps. Only Seventy-five Hats..
125 trimttied hats that we want to clean up the first day. See them. While they last..
White Trimmed Hats
Only forty hats in this lot actual values to $5.00
Trimmed Hats
Ninety-five hats trimmed in our own work-rooms and made to sell for over twice $3.00. Every wanted style and color
Paradise and Aigrettes One-Third Off 1
Off on Plumes, White, Black and Colors
Trimmed Hats
Every hat not included in the above two lots rfh goes at $2.00. Hemps, Leghorns, Panamas, etc. I Jm
Truly they are real values
75 Dozen Flowers 1-2 Off 1-3 Off On All Sport and Felt Hats
GENUINE PANAMAS
$1.98 Values $2.98 Values $3.98 Values $5.00 Values
89c $1.79 $2.69 $3.59
Ostrich Pompons All Colors
$1.00 Values $1.98 Values $2.50 Values $3.50 Values
50c SI.OO $1.49 $1.98 Every Untrimmed Hat in the House
Including Leghorns, Milans, Velvet combinations. $1.98 Values $2.49 Values $2.98 Values $3.98 Values $5 Values
98c $1.49 S1.98 $2.49 $2.98
tire stock of Wings, Ribbons, Ornaments, Chil- Off 's Hats......
Two hundred Colored Untrimmed Hats Milans, Hemps, _r Tagal, Plain Hemps. Values to $3.98
Chip Hats, Combinations, Whites, Blacks 49c
$1.00
Values
values to 47.50
J.
in
mttlmaa/y Mrr
to $10
$3.00
I If
No Mail Orders No Exchanges No Approvals
111
CELL DOORS CLOSE ON FORMER IDOL 01 WAR
Auffenberg Threatened to Write Book to Defend His Case— Suddenly Disappears.
VENICE, July 5.—The story of the fall of General Baron Auffenberg from his position as commander of one of the most powerful of the Austro-Hun-garian armies to an incommunicative cell in an unnamed prison is one or the most closely guarded secrets in Vienna. Austrian newspapers are not allowed 5 to even mention his name, uiu inquirers even in the Hungarian house of deputies have been advised to let the matter drop.
Fom information which has ju»* reached Venice, it appears that cne general was summarily arrested as he was about to leave for Switzerland, and has not since been allowed to comraucate even with his family or lawyers. His object in going to Switzerland wai the publication of a volume of memoirs. in which he hoped to establish his innooence of (mismanaging the Austrian campaign against Serbia by putting _. '.v the blame upon the shoulders of the Austrian commander-in-chief, the Archduke Frederic.
The following explanation of General Auffenberg's rise and fall comes from personal friends of the general. It is in general agreement wun «uoh facts of the case as have been pre- 1 viously established. "General Auffenberg, as a former •minister of war and one of the great 'i:% soldiers of the empire, was pia««d in V' command of the armies which under- 1 took the invasion of Serbia at the beginning of the war. This Invasion ended disastrously the Austrlans were defeated with tremendous losses and retired back across t^ie frontier in dls- -v order. There was a hasty investlgation in Vienna, and the investigators x\ reported that General Auffenberg was I mainly responsible, owing to his gross mistakes of strategy in planning and 75" carrying out his offense. They recom- .f:r •mended that he be suspended from his command. "But it seemed unwise to the military V" powers to thus draw public attention to ." the extent of the disaster in Serbia, so it was decided that Auffenberg*s retirement should be attributed to ill health brought on by the strenuous exertions W '"%h "'t of the campaign, and that the title of
baron should be conferred on him to support the impression that after all nothing really serious had happened to the Austrian forces in Serbia. The new baron waa ordered home and placed on the retired list among 'officers at the disposition of the emperor for future military service. "The general came home reluctant and mystified, and began some quiet investigations of the situation. As soon as he found out that he was blamed for the failure of the Serbian campaign he demanded that his side of the story should be heard. He got no encouragement in official circles, but it became generally known among military men that he planned to re-establish his own reputation by showing that the blame for the failure must be attributed to the Archduke Frederic. "In one case, for example, the general declared to a group of military
GOAT EATS FLORAL NAME.
Makes Idlewlld "Idle," 8o Many Tried to Rent the Plaoe. NEETW ROCHHLLH, N. Y., July Persons who keep goats in New Rochelle will In the future keep the butting menaces within certain confines if the city council adopts an ordinance suggested today by the board of health. Chickens are to be included in the provision of the ordinance.
For several weeks that particular type of citizen who keeps goats has been the subject of discussion in places where the best people in town congregate on hot days. It appears that the goats have been In the habit of nosing around beautiful lawns that impressed them as edible. Several of the best known gardeners in the east have been butted through latticed piazzas recently for assuming that they know more about goats' food than the goats themselves.
It was generally agreed that the matter would be tolerated this summer and definite action taken next fall, but a few days ago Jerry Holdsworth's goats perpetrated an outrage that awakened the city council and the board of health to the necessity of immediate action.
In front of J. N. Torrey's beautiful summer home, Idelwild, the gardener had set flowers in a bank with.^ the name of the estate in flower formation. A goat ate off the word "wild" and several noisy city persons seeing the Idle on the lawn went up to inquire about the rental.
Now the goats are going to hear from the matter.
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men, 'I will not be made the scape-goat »v* for an archduke who ought never to have been entrusted with the supreme command of the imperial forces, but who ought rather to have been locked up in his palace In Vienna to prevent his meddling in the conduct of the war.' "This remark, together with others of similar nature, reached the ears of the archdiike, and the latter's influence was exercised to bring about the downfan of the general. The climax came when Auffenberg asserted that, having failed to secure a hearing in official circles, he would prove his own innocence and the archduke's blame worthiness by writing a book on the war and having It jmblltfhed in Switzerland. "To prevent his flight Into Switzerland and the publication of the threatened book, Emperor Francis Joseph himself stepped In and ordered him arrested and placed in solitary confinement until the end of the war. He was committed to prison by imperial order without the semblance of a trial or investigation. and was not allowed to communicate with the outside world. Questions addressed to the government in the Hungarian house of deputies were answered with the statement that the government could not at this time deal with a purely military matter In parliament."
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