Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 July 1915 — Page 4
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The Terr© Haute Tribune
AND GAZETTE.
An ludrpeudrnt nrn upRper, Dally «n«| »mil«y. The Terr* Haute Gnrette, «utsbllMhed 18*10. Tke Terre Haute TrlImne. established 1804.
Only netTMpnper In Terre Haute havIt»K full day loused wire ••ivicc of Vooulatfd l're«». Central Press aftsoclntW»n nervicc.
Telephone— Business Department, both phones, 378 Editorial Department, Oltlxens. 165 Central Union, 316.
In advance yearly by mail. Dally and Sunday, J6.00, Dallye only, $3.0C. Sunday only, $2.00.
Entered as secondclass matter January 1, 180*. at the postoffice
at Torre Haute, Indiana, under the act of congress if March 2. 1S7 8. A Terre Haute newspaper for Terre Haute people. Thf» only paper ir Terre Jfaiite owned, edited and puliflshed by Terre llnntvcns.
All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters ana pictu-es sent to the Tribune .ire sent at the owners risk, and the Tribune covnpnny expressly repudiates any liability or rnsponsibility for their safe custody or return.
FRESH AIR MISSION.
Charitable women who each summer undertake the care of the Fresh Air mission remind the public that this charity has no special endowment and that the good things done each season are possible only thrqugh the spontaneous generosity of the people. The mission has much to commend it. In the larger cities it is duplicated only on larger scales. On Long Island there is a fresh air mission which receives thousand of children each summer. It is maintained by donations from all over the country which are eent to a weekly publication in New York. In Chicago all of the pipers join in a free ice fund and in a fresh air fund which bring happiness to thousands of children there. The Terr^ Haute mission in the hills across the river has never faltered, nor has its usefulness ever been hampered by the lack of funds. The good women who stood sponsor for the plan have seen to that. But it is easy to imagine what would emanate from the mission were It possible to provide summer recreation for all of the children and mothers deprived of it. A little assistance extended in the direction of the Fresh Air mission pays surprising dividends in satisfaction with life.
TIME FOR THOUGHT.
The next session of congTess doubtless will feel tremendous pressure from
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the people on the subject,of increased nationa 1 defense. Ppesident Wilson has indicated that he will make the matter an administration cause. He will present to congress a_plan for an Improved national d6fenfce and urge its adoption, This plan will be the result of months of work by the heads of the war and navy departments, assisted by the most .capable men on the rolls of both branches- of-the service. The president, however, will be hampered unless backed by the active public opinion of the country.
As Congressman Ralph W. Moss puts it, the creation of a large standing army and the upbuilding of a great military establishment is not even rembtely in the mind of the president or his advisers. Nothing like compulsory military service is thought of. What is being worked out, however, is a plan for the vastly more efficient handling of the present military resources, coupled with increases, particularly In the departments of military instruction, necessary to put this country in a position successfully to face a national emergency.
An important part of the administration recommendations will deal with reforms in the present military establishment that should have been put into effect years ago. The military reservations of the coufttry are scattered about with no relation to the concentration of forces, small as they are, in the case of need. A system has been permitted to grow up where the influence of an individual congressman and his pleas for something for his home district have carried more weight than the plans, frequently urged by miltary experts, for reorganizing the army on an efficiency basis.
THE NUISANCE SOUTH.
Mr. Villa seems to have lost his grip on the Mexican situation or on what part of It he ever had a grip. Carranza is the latest to presume that he can restore peace according to the best ethics held by this country, but he is not making any great headway. The prospect is far from promising. Carranza stupidity, coupled with obstinacy, has blasted in the past high hopes of an understanding that would permit the United States together with other governments actively to assist in straightening out the deplorable conditions In Mexico. There is still
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Pretty Costa Rican
to Wed Bostonian
MISS SIARTA HERSIL.IA CALVO. WASHINGTON, July 19,—Miss Marta Hersilia Calvo, daughter of the former minister from Costa Rica and Mrs. Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, is soon to marry Thomas Dempsey Harrington, son of Dr. and Mrs. T. F. Harrington of Boston. No date has yet been announced for the wedding'', but friends of the young: people believe it will occur during the summer.
Miss Calvo has lived all her life in Washington, where she is a great social favorite. She made her debut two years ago. Harrington is a graduate of one of Washington's universities.
Miss Calvo's father retired as his country's representative at Washington last year after having served as minister from 1S92. For years he has been one of the foremost advocates of closer relations between North, Central and South America, He -founded the first dally newspaper in Costa Rica in 1SS5.
slight hope, howejver, that Carranza will subordinate his self-esteem sufficiently to meet the requirements of the United Sifateaj* giving assurances that will permit the Washington government to extend recognition.
President Wilson has shown Infinite patience In dealing with the international nuisance at our very doorstep. There have been times when he has felt the only recourse was force and the only argument to which the revolutionary leaders would yield, a heavy
The time given by the president in his last note of Warning to Mexico in which he asked the factions to adjust their differences sufficiently tc permit the suppression of anarchy has elapsed. There has been no appreciable improvement in conditions.
The necessity for intervention may be forced upon the United States. In such a contingency President Wilson recently has impressed his cabinet officials with the idea lie will not shirk the duty.
A Philadelphia exchange quotes somebody's statement that Pennsylvania is the greatest game state In the union. Yes, and politics is the game.
The income tax has eocceeded the expectations of even the most sanguine treasury department officials. More trouble for the calamity howler.
Mercury at 100 degrees in Alaska, says the official weather bureau report. And here we were complaining about the heat in Terre Haute.
For propriety's sake there will be no Old Boys' reunion this year. So many Terre Hauteans would be unavoidably detained away.
Anna Howard Shaw's yellow car bids fair to become as famous as Dr. Langley's aeroplane or the late Mr. Holland's undersea terror. .,
The only real humane agency war has left Is the diplomatic note, and that has at least one eminent victim on its mortuary list.
Guaymas claims it wasn't bombarded by the Carranza gunboat. Perhaps it was and didn't know it.
BOOKS W0STH WHILE.
A series of suggestive titles furnished to The Tribune by the Erameline Fairbanks Memorial library.
Political Stories.
Joseph A. Altsheler—"The Candidate," "The Recovery." Gertrude Athsrton—"'Senator North."
Cyrus T. Brady—"The Ring and the Man." Frances Hodgson Burnett—"Through One Administration."
Guy Wetmore Carry!—"Lieutenant Governor." Robert W. Chambers—"Conspirators."
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Winston Churchill—"Coniston," "Mr, Crewe's Career." Joseph Conrad—"Secret Agent."
F. Marion Crawford—"American Politician." Mary Dillon—"The Leader."
Benjamin Disraeli—"Vivian Grey."
THE MOST DESIRABLE ROOMERS read the for rent ads in The Tribune. If you have a room for rent, advertise it in The Tribune. Twelve words, three times. 20c.
XJ5EBE HAUTE IKlBUJMi
SOUTH WAUS MINERS' STRIKE CAUSES GLOOM
Government May Take Over All Properties in Effort to Solve Latest Problem.
BULLETIN.
LONDON, July 19.—David Lloyd George, minister of munitions, has taken a hand in the South Wales coal strike and announced his intention of going to Cardiff tonight to have a talk with the men. This announcement was made shortly after it became known that new proposals had been advanced which apparently offered good prospects of settling the strike.
LONDON, July 19.—Reports from the South Wales coal fields indicate no progress in the negotiations for settlement of the strike but efforts will be made at the cabinet meeting today to find some means of speedily solving the labor problem. It is generally believed in the mining districts, however, that no satisfactory way out of the present difficulties can ire roitnu unless the government takes over the mines and operates them during the war.
One of the first things the miners demand is the withdrawal of the proclamation which brings them -.mder the provisions of the munitions bill. They resent the idea of working under coercion and insist they will not consent to it.
It is known that representatives ot the government who are conversant with the spirit of the miners take a gloomy view of the present situation, but if the proclamation is withdrawn and the government takes over the mines it is possible the men may be prevailed upon to work for the state on satisfactory terms. The idea ot private aggrandizement would thus be eliminated.
The mine owners are alarmed at the great expense to which they are being put, in addition to their lose on profits. The daily expenee Is estimated at $100,000.
The suggestion is made by Thomas Richards, member of parliament and general secretary of the South Wales Miners' Federation, that the men be allowed to go back to ^vork on their own" terms, negotiations for a settlement to be resumed \vhlle vork is proceeding.
HOROSCOPE.
"Tlic Stars Incline, But Do Not Compel." Copyright, 1915, by the McClure
Newspaper Syndicate.)
Tuesday, July 20, 1915.
Good and ill contend today. Early In the morning Neptune and Uranus are strongly adverse. In the afternoon Mercury and Saturn are i® beneflc aspect.
It is a lucky day for writers, aditor^ and publishers, but they are warned of changing conditions in which they will meet witli losses. Serious books will gain in popularity and fiction will be less popular, it is prognosticated.
It is a favorable day for signing agreements and legal documents of all sorts. Actors and singers should be lucky through contracts made unuer thisv rule.
Neptune is in a place presaging more trouble in regard to naval matters. The configuration indicates diplomatic complications in which an oriental nation is concerned indirectly.
There is a sign read aS1 foreshadowing disagreements and inharmony in councils of state. One or two cabinet officials are subject to the evil power of Uranu3.
Mercury in beneflc aspect with the moon today is believed to be most favorable for making purchases, seeking literary employment and traveling. There is a fortunate sign for the Pan-ama-Pacific exposition.
The death of one of the world's foremost financiers is prophesied. Critical crises in various churches are indicated by the planets. Catholic and Protestant will suffer alike, the seers warn.
Persons whose blrthdate it is may meet many annoyances in the coming year, but travel and change are foreshadowed.
TEN YEAES AGO TODAY.
July 19, 1905.
Canton defeated Terre Haute by a score of fi to 3. The Wabash Cycling club is to give a picnic at Forest park.
The pastor of the Washington Avenue Presbyterian church will be chosen at a meeting of the congregation.
It was decided by the delegates attending the glass bottle blowers convention that the next moeting of the association would be held in Atlantic City.
Washing the Hands.
"Wombat has the right idea." "What has he done?" "Put a bath next to his dining room. It is a boon to be able to make frequent trips to a faucet when you are eating fried chicken, for instance.— Louisville Courier Journal.
THE DESF.RTED MILL
It stands alone and silent Boslde the singing stream And at the time of twilight
The sunset's fading beam Rests on it. like the shadow Of some forgotten dream.
Its wheels have long been quiet: It braves the rain and snow And yet its heart is aching
With emptiness and woe And I am sure is misses The grain that used to flow. Beneath its sloping shelter.
In June the lovers stand, And tell a sweet old story That lives in every land. (They think that it is sleeping
And does not understand!)
It stands alone and wistful Beside the sighing stream And at the time of twilight
The sunset's dying beam Rests on it like the promise Of some forgotten dream. —Margaret E. Sangster, Jr., In Christian Herald.
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A healthy, refreshing departure from the usual dusty and uninteresting paths of criticisms is Dr. Joseph J. Reilly's late book, "James Russell Lowell as a Critic." The author concedes Lowell's place in American literature, j'et by his careful and complete analysis, aided by innumerable quotations from the author under consideration which irresistibly force the reader to acknowledge Dr. Reilly's emphatic knowledge of his subject and his matter, shows Lowell to have been an Impressionist despite the long acceptance of him as a critic. Lowell is treated from four view-points—the range of hi3 knowledge his sympathy his judicial attitude and his power ot penetration. That Lowell was wonderfully gifted, Dr. Reilly concedes— gifted not only from his inherent love and study of letters, but also from his experiences in varied fields, his travels and his intercourse with men of talent, learning and experience. Dr. Reilly refuses to grant Lowell the sympathy which is one of the surest insignia of the true critic—granting him only sufficient to make him a man of letters, not a real critic, and asserting that Lowell's sympathy in the drama and novel was but meagre. Lowell's attempt to adopt an honest judicial attitude is conceded, but his enthusiasm carried him to excesses—excesses of praise or blame, and depriving,him of the ability to conceal his own personality, and forcing him almost to fall into" pleading for his subject. Lack of penetration, another very necessary attribute of the true critic, is Lowell's characteristic failure according to Dr. Reilly, and his position in. this assertion is sustained by innumerable quotations from many of Lowell'3 wonts.
A careful and unbiased digestion of Dr. Reilly's book cannot help but bring the conclusion that he has in a clcar, logical manner, supporting every contention by excerpts from -Lowell's works placed the latter in the field of Impressionism, and not in the plane ot criticism—and this despite the horror which must necessarily arise in t'-.e minds of those who have accepted Lowell as pre-eminent in the field of criticism.
Whatever the personal and private convictions of the reader of Dr. Reilly's book may be regarding Lowell, there can come but a real thrill of delight in the treatise of Dr. Lowell—a feeling of relief at the departure from the dry and difficult methods of usual criticism, and the delight that comes with the knowledge that Lowell is being treated by a man with vim and vigor who knows and feels his subject and wishes the world to appreciate the real Lowell in the position which he reallv ought to have. Dr. Reilly's book is unquestionably a welcome departure from usual works of criticism and it's grace, it's style and the clear logic of it will unquestionably fix it as a standard and its writer as a man of letters. ("James Russell Lowell as a Critio." —Dr. Joseph J. Reilly G. A. Putnam's Sons.)
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NEW BOOKS POLICE COuRT DOCKET
Two hours is too long to wait between trains in Terre Haute, John Adams, who said he was on his way to his sick wife in Indianapolis, told Judge Newton Monday morning. Adams said his thirst got the best of him. He was fined 15 and costs and the court suspended the penalty on his promise to hurry to Indianapolis.
Robert Lewis admitted he was "just a little bit drunk." He has a Job and an inclination to work, he said. The court gave him a chance to satisfy it.
William Batcheleor said he had acted as a good Samaritan when he visited the home of his washerwoman, Flo Gibson Gones, at 17 Ohio street, and found her sick Saturday night. He said he slept on the floor during the night. Statutory charges against them were dismissed on theft* promise to keep away from each other.
Goldie Jones, who is charged with stealing a watch' from Nettie Bond, was he\d for trial on Tuesday afternoon., She pleaded not guilty.
Harry O. Starr was given a suspended, fine of $25 and costs on a promf3Q to. quit drinking.
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All first-class lruggists sell them, or they can get them for you, or delivered to any part of the city by the Owl Drug Co., 307 Ohio street. Both phones.
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